Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Passing $1 trillion

Amazon picks up final $200 billion in three-month burst.

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sophie Caronello of Bloomberg News.

JERAN WITTENSTEI­N AND LU WANG

America went 242 years without a trillion-dollar company. Thirty-three days after getting the first, it now has two.

And while Apple Inc. lumbered through the final stretch, needing 15 months to traverse the last $200 billion, Amazon.com Inc. covered it in a three-month sprint. The $440 billion in market value it has created in 2018 alone exceeds the value of all but five S&P 500 companies.

Jeff Bezos’ online superstore rose as much as 1.9 percent to $2,050.50 in New York on Tuesday, sending its capitaliza­tion briefly above $1 trillion for the first time. Apple passed the 13-digit boundary on Aug. 2. Two other companies, Microsoft Corp. and Google parent Alphabet Inc., are within $170 billion of the goal.

“I never would have thought at $200 that this would be a $2,000 stock,” said Jason Cooper, a money manager who helps oversee $4 billion including Apple and Amazon shares at 1st Source Investment Advisors in South Bend, Ind. “At $300, I thought we missed the boat. Boy, was that wrong.”

Through trade wars, unpreceden­ted market volatility, rising interest rates and stock market stress in China, Amazon’s share performanc­e has been as close to straightup as could be in 2018. It’s had one down month — March — all year, with the average gain in the other seven standing at 9 percent.

It’s another display of might for technology companies grown on America’s West Coast, a cohort of big players whose relentless

● appreciati­on has come to be known as the FAANG rally. Along with Facebook Inc., Netflix Inc. and Google, the quintet have created $2 trillion in equity value in three years.

From a valuation perspectiv­e, Amazon and Apple reflect distinct judgments about what constitute­s value in the stock market. Apple may earn more than $58 billion in its 2018 fiscal year, the fruit of maturing franchises in everything from mobile phones to personal computers. At about 19 times projected profit, the company is big and also relatively cheap. Back out the $244 billion in cash and cash equivalent­s Apple had at the end of its fiscal third quarter and it’s even cheaper.

Amazon’s a different animal, a retail behemoth that maniacally held down profit margins for all of its 24-year existence and is expected to earn a relatively paltry $8.5 billion in 2018. That’s good for a price-earnings ratio of 120 — a sign of the huge faith Wall Street puts in Bezos to execute over time.

“This is a company that has pioneered e-commerce, and has visionary leadership — they’ve done an amazing job of dominating their niche and successful­ly

expanding,” said James Angel, professor at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business. “It could be irrational. It could the market getting carried away. But the market usually knows more than I know.”

For now, the rapid ascent is a validation of the growth-atall-costs ethos that has defined Bezos’ vision. While the conversati­on around Apple has shifted from iPhones to sales of apps and music streaming subscripti­ons, Amazon has relentless­ly expanded into new markets, from groceries to data centers. The Seattle company’s revenue is growing at a better than 30 percent clip, more than twice that expected from Apple this year.

Of course, Amazon.com is the younger of the two, having been founded in 1994, a good 18 years after Apple. In addition to slower growth, the maturity of Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple shows in its governance, which is bent on returning profits to shareholde­rs. Apple has doled out more than $275 billion as dividends and buybacks since 2012.

In contrast, Amazon, which has never paid out a cent through either route, generates relatively little in the way of profits and continues to invest heavily in its businesses. Capital expenditur­es, or spending on physical assets such as warehouses and equipment, jumped to nearly $12 billion in 2017, up from $7.8 billion the year before.

That spending has helped fuel growth in businesses such as Amazon Web Services, which is much more profitable than Amazon’s core retail operations. The company’s cloud-computing operations and other high margin businesses such as advertisin­g will account for about 22 percent of total revenue in 2018 and could generate as much as $45 billion in operating profit by 2020, Morgan Stanley said in a research note on Aug. 29.

Perhaps because of that, the retailer gets a slight edge in analyst adoration. While its number of followers is roughly in line with Apple, the proportion of analysts saying buy Amazon is the highest among big tech companies. On a scale from 1 to 5 where higher is better, Amazon has a consensus recommenda­tion of 4.8. Other metrics paint a less divergent picture. Both companies are trading in the neighborho­od of four times sales and, using a valuation lens that adjusts the price-earnings ratio for the rate of earnings growth, the two are traded at about the same multiple.

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 ?? AP/MARK LENNIHAN ?? A Nasdaq employee monitors market activity Tuesday at the New York Stock Exchange. Amazon flirted with a market value of $1 trillion, becoming just the second publicly traded company to reach the milestone.
AP/MARK LENNIHAN A Nasdaq employee monitors market activity Tuesday at the New York Stock Exchange. Amazon flirted with a market value of $1 trillion, becoming just the second publicly traded company to reach the milestone.

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