Houston Chronicle

Amazon hikes Prime membership by $20

- By Abha Bhattarai

Amazon.com on Thursday said profits more than doubled to $1.6 billion in the first quarter, sending shares of its stock soaring to an all-time high on the same day it increased the fee for Prime membership.

The company’s fast-growing advertisin­g and cloud businesses drove much of its growth, and contribute­d to its second straight quarter of billion-dollar profits. Overall sales rose 43 percent to $51 billion, up from $35.7 billion a year earlier.

Amazon also said it will hike its Prime membership fee 20 percent to $119 a year for new members beginning May 11. Existing members who renew their Prime membership­s will have to pay the new rate beginning June 16. The company said earlier this month that it has 100 million Prime members, the first time it has released the number.

“The Prime program continues to drive great strength to our top line,” Brian Olsavsky, Amazon’s chief financial officer, said in a Thursday earnings call with analysts.

The Prime membership program has been an important cornerston­e of Amazon’s flagship retail business. Prime members now receive free two-day shipping on 100 million items, up from 20 million in 2014, Olsavsky said.

Shares of Amazon spiked as much as 7 percent to a record $1,619 in after-hours trading, erasing recent losses following a series of tweets from President Donald Trump that attacked the company. The president also launched a study of whether Amazon is getting too good of a deal from the U.S. Postal Service. ( Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive of Amazon, also owns the Washington Post.)

Amazon, founded 24 years ago as a online bookseller, has grown into a multi-billion-dollar tech juggernaut with a hand in number of industries, including groceries, private-label clothing and movie production. Earlier this year, Amazon announced it was teaming up with Berkshire Hathaway and JP Morgan Chase to create its own independen­t health-care company.

But its success has come at the cost of brick-and-mortar retailers and several competitor­s have been complainin­g to government officials that the company is getting too big. But Amazon’s success in so many different lines of business has not been easy for regulators to tackle, given that federal antitrust law largely focuses on consolidat­ion within distinct industries.

Amazon Web Services, the cloud platform, continued to bring in the bulk of the company’s profits. That part of the business had a 26 percent operating margin in the most recent quarter, compared to 3.8 percent for the overall company. AWS sales, meanwhile, rose 49 percent to $5.44 billion, as thousands of new companies signed up for the service.

Earlier in the week, Amazon announced it would begin delivering packages straight to certain vehicles parked at homes, offices and other publicly accessible areas. The program, initially available to Prime members in 37 cities, including Houston, is the latest effort by the Seattlebas­ed company to make it easier for customers to receive online orders.

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