Gulf News

Amazon offers up some respite among tech behemoths

E-tailer conjures up stronger margins on new lines and that should keep investors contented

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Do you want the good news or the bad about Amazon. com Inc? They may be one and the same. In the second quarter, the company interrupte­d what had been a torrid pace of revenue growth and predicted a slower pace for the third quarter. But profits were positively plump, at least by Amazon’s standards, in signs that relatively highermarg­in businesses are becoming bigger chunks of Amazon’s total sales and that the freespendi­ng company may have gone on something of a diet.

What Amazon delivered wasn’t exactly a reprieve for the US tech superpower­s after Facebook’s quarterly face plant. After all, investors have gravitated to companies like Amazon and Facebook for their incredible growth rates and firm hold on lucrative areas of the economy.

Amazon didn’t deliver on the growth front, but its profits and its pace of revenue in the right places may be enough to calm the stormy big tech seas.

Amazon said its revenue rose 39 per cent from the second quarter of 2017 — a figure that fell shy of Wall Street forecasts but was nearly dead centre of the company’s own prediction. Excluding sales from Whole Foods, which Amazon didn’t own at this point last year, the revenue growth rate was even lower, perhaps around 29 per cent.

Amazon’s forecast for the third quarter predicted an even slower rate of revenue gains, including an expected sting of foreign-currency swings. The number of individual items sold on Amazon rose 17 per cent, a sharp slowdown in growth from prior quarters.

That’s not bullish, but there were happier growth surprises if you dug deeper. Amazon’s cloud-computing operation, Amazon Web Services, posted a 49 per cent jump in revenue and now accounts for 11.5 per cent of the company’s total sales. Revenue more than doubled in a category that includes Amazon’s digital advertisin­g business — a relatively new operation.

As the relatively high-margin advertisin­g and AWS businesses generate larger slices of Amazon’s total sales, it has the effect of lifting Amazon’s profit margins. Those are happy spots of growth in a report that otherwise fell short of optimistic hopes. The question is how much Amazon investors will be bothered by this.

Investors are eager to own shares in fast-growing tech companies, but they are quick to turn on them if growth falters. That was in part what happened to Facebook and Netflix. The investor whiplash can be particular­ly acute if the fast-growing company, like Amazon or Netflix, has skimpy profits at the same time its sales growth is easing.

But Amazon investors can be comforted by the company’s surprising­ly strong margins. In the segment that includes Amazon’s US e-commerce business, the operating profit margin of 5.7 per cent was the plumpest in some time. Its forecast for the third quarter implies another strong period for margins.

Sales from Whole Foods and the growing share of sales from AWS and advertisin­g are helping, but it’s also clear that Amazon is keeping a closer watch on its costs. Particular­ly notable was Amazon’s costs to buy products that it resells, packaging supplies and other basic expenses to run its business. That cost of sales, expressed as a percentage of Amazon’s revenue, was the lowest in years.

Amazon Web Services also posted its fattest operating margin since the segment started reporting its financials in 2015. Amazon’s spending also markedly slowed for big-ticket projects such as its package warehouses and computer data centres.

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