Calgary Herald

Amazon finally lifts veil on Prime profit figures

Membership program and other services bring in $6.4B as some predict stock hike

- BY SHELLY BANJO AND SHIRA OVIDE Bloomberg

Amazon is letting investors in on (some of ) the ingredient­s in its secret sauce.

For the first time, Amazon.com Inc. has released figures detailing how much money it brings in through its Prime membership program and other subscripti­on services.

Although the disclosure made up just a few paragraphs in a 77-page document filed late Friday, breaking out these numbers is a big deal for investors searching for clarity on whether the secretive company can increase profits over time. The new data about one of Amazon’s most important features should embolden Amazon bulls, some of whom see the stock rising 50 per cent in the next 12 months.

The last time Amazon broke out the financial details of a major revenue source — Amazon Web Services — it sent the company’s stock soaring. The April 2015 disclosure outlined how big and profitable its cloud-services business was, completely changing the way Amazon was valued by analysts and investors, many of whom weren’t convinced Amazon would ever post a profit. Shares in the tech giant have more than doubled since then.

The AWS analogy isn’t exactly apples-to-apples. The biggest revelation of the disclosure wasn’t revenue. Rather, it was the scale of operating profit delivered by the cloud-computing business that blew investors away.

The cloud unit turns about 20 to 25 cents of each dollar of revenue into operating profit, including the cost of stock compensati­on. On the same basis, Amazon’s North America e-commerce business has two per cent to three per cent operating profit margins. The realizatio­n that AWS was a high-margin and fast-growing business made investors believe Amazon would be a far more profitable and more valuable company in the future.

In its latest annual filing, Amazon only disclosed that it brought in $6.4 billion from Amazon Prime and other subscripti­on services such as e-books and videos. Assuming around 90 per cent of Amazon’s subscripti­on revenue comes from the $99 annual membership fee, Morgan Stanley estimates there are about 65 million paying Prime members.

Net sales from Amazon Prime and other subscripti­ons are still growing by more than 40 per cent annually, a dozen years after Amazon launched the membership program. That’s a good sign for Amazon’s future prospects, especially considerin­g the majority of Prime members are still in the U.S. And some analysts estimate Prime subscriber­s buy twice as much on Amazon as people who aren’t part of the shopping club.

But it’s still unclear how profitable the Prime program is today.

It might not matter. Lifting the veil on Prime revenue won’t immediatel­y change perception­s of Amazon as a company with uncertain profit potential. But the fresh disclosure does make it easier to imagine Amazon’s membership fees curing one of the company’s biggest headaches: its growing tab for packing and shipping its merchandis­e.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN/AP FILES ?? The release of Amazon’s financial data for its key Prime membership program is expected to embolden Amazon bulls.
MARK LENNIHAN/AP FILES The release of Amazon’s financial data for its key Prime membership program is expected to embolden Amazon bulls.

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