National Post

Amazon investors eye cash hoard

- JERAN WITTENSTEI­N AND RYAN VLASTELICA With assistance from Matt Day and Subrat Patnaik Bloomberg

For years, Amazon.com Inc. has been the stingiest among tech megacaps to give back capital to shareholde­rs. Now, it’s generating so much cash that some on Wall Street are anticipati­ng more generous returns.

After a record haul of US$32 billion in free cash flow last year, Amazon is projected to nearly double that in 2024, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. With Big Tech acquisitio­ns increasing­ly facing regulatory opposition, Amazon has fewer options on how it chooses to deploy that cash, according to Robert Schiffman at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

“This suggests not only rising share buybacks, but a more aggressive capital return policy that could include a dividend,” he said. “If returns don’t increase, cash balances could soar above US$100 billion later this year.”

Amazon had more than US$86 billion in cash at the end of 2023.

For most of its three decades in existence, Amazon has opted to plow its cash back into the business. The last buyback was in 2022 for US$10 billion, which is a pittance compared with similar-sized peers.

In 2023, Alphabet Inc. repurchase­d more than US$60 billion in shares, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Facebook-parent Meta Platforms Inc. spent more than US$20 billion on buybacks in the same period and in February pledged an additional US$50 billion while initiating its first-ever quarterly dividend.

Amazon, by contrast, didn’t buy back any shares in 2023. A change in its capital-return policy would signal a shift as the company evolves under chief executive Andy Jassy, who took the reins from co-founder Jeff Bezos in 2021.

Amazon shares have managed to outperform even in the absence of big buybacks. The stock has climbed 20 per cent this year, pushing its market value to US$1.9 trillion as analysts continue to hike profit estimates and traders grow increasing­ly optimistic about artificial intelligen­ce helping to reinvigora­te Amazon Web Services.

The Nasdaq 100 has gained eight per cent over the same period.

Still, while Amazon is on the cusp of setting a new alltime high, it’s alone among the five biggest U.S. tech companies that isn’t yet in record territory. Microsoft Corp., for example, is trading about 20 per cent above its 2021 record, while Meta is up more than 30 per cent from its previous peak in the same year.

Naveen Jayasundar­am at Clearbridg­e Investment­s LLC expects Amazon to announce a buyback in the tens of billions of dollars sometime this year, but sees a dividend as unlikely.

“I think Amazon views itself as being earlier in the growth cycle compared with Alphabet and Meta, so I would be surprised if we got a dividend this year,” he said.

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