Amazon’s cloud stabilizing, shoppers cautious heading into holiday season
By
Reuters
Amazon
The company predicted a rise in revenue over the key holiday season that could still miss Wall Street expectations, as it reported strong third quarter results buoyed by a recent marketing blitz and faster delivery.
Shares in the company ricocheted after hours, rising, falling and ultimately rising 5%. Facing an array of challenges to its business, Amazon is trying to keep its mantle as the world’s biggest cloud provider and online retailer.
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The company has sought to bolster its cloud, answering rivals Google and Microsoft with a deal to invest up to $4 billion in chatbot-maker Anthropic and touting an AI service drawing thousands of users.
Amazon likewise has reorganized its delivery network to locate goods closer to shoppers, letting it fulfill orders faster than before, and more cheaply.
At the same time, it has faced an array of challenges, among them tight household budgets, businesses scrutinizing their cloud spending and a September lawsuit by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, which accuses Amazon of inflating prices and wielding monopoly power.
The company is contesting the claims.
Against this backdrop, the company forecast revenue in the range of $160 billion and $167 billion for the all-important holiday quarter ending Dec. 31. Analysts polled by LSEG were expecting sales of $166.62 billion, at the higher end of Amazon’s guidance.
Sophie Lund-Yates, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said Amazon’s ramp-up in seasonal hires boded well for consumer discretionary spending, to a point.
“We could be looking at a final spending push before a substantial pull back in the new year. So, this is a risk that will need monitoring closely,” she said.