The Daily Telegraph

Amazon posts $113bn in sales but leaves Wall Street disappoint­ed

- By Io Dodds in San Francisco

AMAZON last night entered the postjeff Bezos era with a leap in profit and sales, despite an end to coronaviru­s lockdowns that had turbocharg­ed online shopping.

The digital retail giant said revenues had climbed by 27pc in the three months to the end of June to $113bn (£81bn), the third successive quarter revenues had surpassed $100bn. However, shares dropped by 5pc in afterhours trading, with the sales figures missing analysts’ expectatio­ns and coming in towards the lower end of Amazon’s own guidance.

Profits climbed to $7.8bn, up 50pc on the same period a year ago, when worldwide shutdowns had sent consumers flocking to Amazon for essential goods.

It was the first set of results issued since its core markets in the West began to reopen, and is seen as a crucial test of whether Amazon’s enormous expansion during lockdown would stick once customers could shop in person more freely.

It was also the first set of results under Amazon’s new chief executive Andy Jassy, 53, who previously ran its highly profitable cloud services division AWS and who took over from its founder Mr Bezos earlier this month.

Among his first challenges will be an attempt by US regulators and legislator­s to break up the company or curb its empire, as well as a renewed campaign by American unions to organise its warehouse workers.

In his first public comments as chief executive, Mr Jassy pointed to the support that Amazon’s retail operation, as well as its giant cloud computing arm AWS, had provided in the pandemic.

“Over the past 18 months, our consumer business has been called on to deliver an unpreceden­ted number of items, including PPE, food, and other products that helped communitie­s around the world cope with the difficult circumstan­ces of the pandemic,” he said.

“At the same time, AWS has helped so many businesses and government­s maintain business continuity.”

Mr Bezos, the richest person on Earth, will continue as Amazon’s executive chairman, focusing on long-term projects such as research to improve workplace safety and side hustles such as his rocket company Blue Origin, which briefly blasted him into space last week.

Following the flight, Mr Bezos said: “I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer, because you guys paid for all this.”

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