San Diego Union-Tribune

AMAZON’S REVENUE AND PROFIT INCREASE IN Q1, REVERSING SLIDE

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Amazon on Thursday reported a continuing slowdown in its cloud computing unit AWS, but strongerth­an-expected revenue and profits for the first quarter sent its stocks higher in after-hours trading.

The Seattle-based company said it pulled in $127.4 billion in revenue for the January-March quarter, a 9 percent growth compared to the $116.4 billion it reported during the same period last year. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected $124.6 billion.

Profits came out to $3.2 billion, or 31 cents per share, higher than the $2.24 billion industry analysts had expected. It’s also a strong improvemen­t from the same period last year, when the ecommerce giant reported its first quarterly loss in years mainly driven by a loss in value of its investment in the electric vehicle company Rivian Automotive.

Amazon’s stock rose in after-hours trading but then dipped 2 percent.

The report on Thursday rounds out a busy earnings week for major tech companies. On Wednesday, Facebook parent Meta beat profit and revenue expectatio­ns, leading to a bounce in its stocks in after-hours trading. Microsoft posted a spike in profits on Tuesday driven by a strong showing in its cloud segment Azure, which recently saw some slowdowns in growth. Google reported its cloud business grew by a strong 28 percent, leading to its first operating profit. But it grew at a slower pace compared to the same period last year.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy wrote in his annual shareholde­r’s letter released earlier this month that AWS, the leader in the cloud market, was facing short-term headwinds as companies become more cautious in their spending amid more uncertaint­y in the economy. The company said Thursday the segment grew 16 percent during the first quarter, which beat analyst expectatio­ns but had a much slower showing than a 37 percent growth rate a year prior.

“Amazon did what it needed to do in Q1 by reversing — or at least stalling — its most troublesom­e declining growth trends,” Insider Intelligen­ce principal analyst Andrew Lipsman said in a statement.

“For the first time in several quarters, Amazon may finally have a bit of wind at its back,” he said.

Amazon reported no growth in the first quarter in its online retail business. It grew by 3 percent excluding foreign exchange rates, according to its calculatio­ns. Company executives have said shoppers have become more conscious about their spending and are trying to save costs when they can. On top of that, many shoppers have let go of their pandemic-fueled reliance on ecommerce, which led Amazon to report record revenue figures at the time.

During a call with reporters on Thursday, Amazon Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky said consumers continue to be cautious with their spending amid high inflation and are looking to stretch their budgets further by purchasing lowerprice­d items.

But he said the company continues to see bright spots in its advertisin­g business and in internatio­nal sales helped by easing economic pressures in Europe, among other areas.

Amazon too has been cutting its expenses amid more overall sluggish online sales and concerns over whether the U.S. will dip into a recession. The company began trimming its spending last year by canceling some of its warehouse expansion plans and reducing headcount in its facilities through attrition. And its been moving its warehouses from a national to a regionaliz­ed network model as part of an effort to improve delivery speed and save costs.

Amazon accelerate­d cost-saving measures over the past couple of quarters by cutting 27,000 corporate roles in different units, including devices, advertisin­g, AWS and Twitch, the popular live streaming platform it acquired in 2014. It has also axed several businesses that weren’t bringing in enough cash, such as its healthcare startup Amazon Care, subsidiary fabric.com and the video calling device Amazon Glow. On Wednesday, the company said it would shut down its health-focused Halo devices and related membership service on August 1.

In February, the retailer said it would shut down some of its Amazon Fresh and Go convenienc­e stores and pause expansions as it attempts to find the right formula for its grocery business.

Amazon has also paused constructi­on on the second phase of its headquarte­rs in northern Virginia. It expects to bring thousands into the first phase of the developmen­t when it opens in June, and has asked for $152.7 million in state incentives for bringing those jobs to Virginia.

 ?? CINDY SCHULTZ NYT ?? Amazon pulled in $127.4 billion in revenue, and profits came out to $3.2 billion, in the first quarter.
CINDY SCHULTZ NYT Amazon pulled in $127.4 billion in revenue, and profits came out to $3.2 billion, in the first quarter.

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