Amazon has strong third quarter
Retailer posts $143.1 billion in revenue, beats projection
Amazon reported solid quarterly sales Thursday, showing that corporations and consumers are confident in spending as inflation has eased.
The company posted $143.1 billion in revenue for the third quarter, up 13% from a year earlier. It had $9.9 billion in profits. The results beat analysts' expectations and surpassed Amazon's own forecast.
Amazon also projected that sales growth may moderate somewhat in the last three months of the year, a period that includes the critical holiday shopping season.
Investors have been keenly focused on the performance of Amazon's cloud computing business, which is critical to Amazon because it produces a majority of the company's profits.
For almost a year, the growth of the cloud computing business rapidly decelerated, as enterprise customers cautiously watched their budgets in the uncertain economy. But Thursday's results showed signs it was stabilizing. Sales in the cloud computing division were up
12%, to $23 billion. It had $7 billion in operating profit.
Although Amazon is the top provider of cloud computing, it is working to shake off the perception that it is lagging behind rivals, most notably Microsoft and Google, in the wave of generative artificial intelligence sweeping the industry. It has introduced new AI products for enterprise customers, and last month it announced plans to invest up to $4 billion in the AI startup Anthropic, which competes with OpenAI, the Microsoft-backed startup that created
the popular chatbot ChatGPT.
A year ago, investors fretted about the state of Amazon's retail business, whose profits tanked after overexpanding during the pandemic. Andy Jassy, the company's CEO, has focused on driving profits by cutting costs, and has overseen layoffs as well as a drastic pullback in hiring. The company employed 1.5 million people in the most recent quarter, down 3% from a year earlier, although still twice as many as before the pandemic.
This year, Amazon also rolled out changes to how it fulfilled customer orders, placing more inventory closer to customers in a move that improved delivery speeds and brought
down costs.
“The benefits of moving from a single national fulfillment network in the U.S. to eight distinct regions are exceeding our optimistic expectations,” Jassy said in a statement.
The lower costs have improved profit margins. Sales for the consumer and retail offerings in
North America, its most mature market, increased 11% to $87.9 billion, producing $4.3 billion in operating profit.
Several of the most profitable parts of its e-commerce business — notably its advertising offerings — performed well. Growth of Amazon's advertising revenue accelerated to 26%, reaching $12 billion in the quarter.
Sales of services Amazon provides to third-party sellers on its marketplace grew 20%, to $34 billion. The costs for sellers to do business on Amazon is a key issue in a long-anticipated antitrust lawsuit brought by the Federal Trade Commission last month.