The Wichita Eagle

Analysts reboot Amazon stock price target ahead of earnings

- BY ROB LENIHAN TheStreet

Andy Jassy isn’t Isaac Newton, but he knows how gravity works. Responding to what he called a “provocativ­e question,” the Amazon chief executive explained the secret to the e-commerce giant’s resilience in his annual letter to shareholde­rs.

Jassy listed several reasons for Amazon’s 30-year success story, including “hiring builders who are motivated to improve and expand what’s possible continuall­y; and solving real customer challenges rather than what we think may be interestin­g technology.”

And one of the concepts sounded really basic.

“Not wasting time trying to fight gravity (spoiler alert: you always lose),” Jassy wrote. “When we discover technology that enables better customer experience­s, we embrace it.”

He also cited his company’s ability to accept and learn from failed experiment­s and “actually becoming more energized to try again, with new knowledge to employ.”

Amazon is scheduled to report first-quarter results on Tuesday. Analysts surveyed by FactSet estimate the company earned 84 cents a share on $142.7 billion in revenue.

A year earlier, Amazon earned 31 cents a share on $127.4 billion.

Several analysts adjusted their stock price targets for the Bellevue, Washington, company ahead of the earnings report.

BMO Capital analyst Brian Pitz raised the firm’s price target on Amazon shares to $215 from $205 and affirmed an outperform rating.

“The most frequent AMZN questions we get are about AWS growth trajectory and the durability of the Retail-operating-income unlock,” Pitz said, referring to Amazon Web Services, the company’s cloud services program.

BMO raised its 2024 estimated revenue growth for AWS to 15% from 14%, with upside potential remaining from generative­artificial-intelligen­ce workloads and IT-spending migration.

In February, Amazon introduced Rufus, a generative AI-powered shopping assistant.

TheStreet Pro Portfolio team said on Feb. 2 that “we will be looking to gauge reception to Rufus, and should it boost average cart and transactio­n size, it would be reason to think Amazon can take further share from brickand-mortar retailers.”

BMO maintained that the Rufus integratio­n in retail is underappre­ciated and positions retail for double-digit growth in gross merchandis­e value and a meaningful unlock of free cash flow.

Wedbush analysts raised their price target on Amazon to $225 a share from $220 while reiteratin­g their outperform rating and keeping the company on the firm’s Best Ideas list.

“We think Amazon is well positioned this year with multiple drivers of sustainabl­e margin expansion in place,” analysts said. “The company has reported operating income ahead of [Wall Street] estimates for five consecutiv­e quarters, and we estimate” first-quarter operating income of $11.6 billion, about 5% above the analyst consensus.

Heading into the results, Wedbush analysts said they were looking for sustained advertisin­g momentum, given the positive feedback from advertiser­s in the firm’s first-quarter 2024 Digital Advertisin­g Survey and from digital advertisin­g agencies.

They said they’re also looking for accelerati­ng growth at Amazon Web Services and incrementa­l commentary on AI-related demand, as well as ongoing improvemen­ts in retail profit margins in both North America and internatio­nal.

Citi analysts boosted their share price target for Amazon to $235 a share from $215, reiteratin­g a stock buy rating.

The investment bank said that based on its analysis of Amazon’s Advertisin­g, Retail, and AWS business units, it projects 2025’s estimated operating income at $73 billion.

While AWS, which posted $24.2 billion in revenue for the fourth quarter, remains the largest contributo­r to operating income, the firm said it was looking for core retail margins to expand significan­tly on improving efficienci­es.

 ?? DOMINIKA ZARZYCKA SOPA Images/Sipa USAUSA TODAY NETWORK ?? Amazon is scheduled to report first-quarter results on Tuesday. Analysts surveyed by FactSet estimate the company earned 84 cents a share on $142.7 billion in revenue. A year earlier, Amazon earned 31 cents a share on $127.4 billion.
DOMINIKA ZARZYCKA SOPA Images/Sipa USAUSA TODAY NETWORK Amazon is scheduled to report first-quarter results on Tuesday. Analysts surveyed by FactSet estimate the company earned 84 cents a share on $142.7 billion in revenue. A year earlier, Amazon earned 31 cents a share on $127.4 billion.

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