National Post

Amazon forecast shows cracks in e-commerce

Expenditur­es up, profit outlook muted SHARES DROP 4.3%

- Spencer Soper

SE AT TLE • Amazon. com Inc. reported a steep jump in quarterly expenses and gave a disappoint­ing profit outlook, blunting its momentum as the e- commerce giant prepares to enter the grocery store business by buying Whole Foods Market Inc.

The results and forecast show the world’s biggest online retailer is preparing for stepped up competitio­n from rival Wal- Mart Stores Inc. and cloud- computing challenger­s Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc.

Investors have put i nc r e asi ng f ai t h in c hi e f executive Jeff Bezos to keep the company growing by entering new categories such as groceries and appliances and expanding abroad. Their confidence has sent the stock up 39 per cent this year and was unfazed by the announceme­nt that Amazon would spend US$ 13.7 billion for Whole Foods, the company’s biggest- ever acquisitio­n. But the support took a turn in extended trading after Thursday’s results were reported, with shares falling as much as 4.3 per cent to US$1,001.80.

Second-quarter expenses i ncreased 28 per cent t o US$ 37. 3 billion. Sales gained 25 per cent to US$ 38 billion, the Seattlebas­ed company said in a statement. Net income declined to US$ 197 million, or 40 cents a share, from US$ 857 million, or US$ 1.78 a share, a year earlier. Anal ysts estimated profit of US$ 1.42 a share on revenue of US$ 37.2 billion, accord- i ng to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“Spending i s always a concern with Amazon, but investors eventually give Amazon a pass because Amazon invests in growth opportunit­ies,” said Victor Anthony, an analyst at Aegis Capital Corp.

The company is expanding into India and Australia, speeding up delivery times to as little as an hour on select products, adding new skills and devices for its voice- activated Alexa platform and producing original movies and shows. Amazon hired more than 30,000 new employees “in the last few months,” Bezos said.

Chief fi nancial officer Brian Olsavsky said t he company’s spending f or video programmin­g, devices and expanded warehouse capacity around the country will continue in anticipati­on of the peak spending season.

The third quarter “is generally a high i nvestment period for the holiday,” he said.

Amazon forecast oper- ating earnings in the period ranging from a loss of US$ 400 million to a profit of US$300 million. Net sales will be US$ 39.25 billion to US$ 41.75 billion. Analysts estimated operating income of US$ 863.5 million on US$ 40 billion in sales. The company reported operating income of US$ 575 million on sales of US$ 32.7 billion in the third quarter a year ago.

The forecast excludes the deal for Whole Foods, where Amazon is betting it can replicate its online selling success.

With 460 stores across the U. S., the acquisitio­n is a major push into the US$800 billion grocery category dominated by Wal- Mart, which has more than 26 per cent of the market. The upscale grocery- store chain on Wednesday r eported i mproving results in the second quarter, with sales declining less than analysts expected.

Amazon dominates ecommerce in the U. S. with its US$ 99- a- year Amazon Prime subscripti­on, which includes delivery discounts, music and video streaming and is intended to keep shoppers engaged with the website. The company had 85 million Prime subscriber­s in the U.S. as of June 30, an increase of 35 per cent from a year earlier, according to Consumer Intelligen­ce Research Partners. Amazon’ s subscripti­on services revenue, which is mostly from Prime membership­s, increased 51 per cent to US $2.17 billion in the quarter — faster than 49 per cent in the previous quarter.

Revenue from Amazon Web Services, its profitable cloud- computing division, increased 42 percent to US$ 4.1 billion. The unit’s sales increased 43 per cent in the previous quarter.

Sales of warehousin­g, packaging and other logistics services Amazon provides for e- commerce merchants increased 38 per cent to US$7 billion. That’s faster than 34 per cent in the last quarter.

 ?? JOSEPH NAIR / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A staff member scans a product at the newly opened Amazon Prime Now facility in Singapore on Thursday. The company is expanding into India and Australia, as well.
JOSEPH NAIR / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A staff member scans a product at the newly opened Amazon Prime Now facility in Singapore on Thursday. The company is expanding into India and Australia, as well.

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