AMZN

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AMZN
$272,69
+$1,93(+0,71%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-10 01:54 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-10 01:54, Amazon (AMZN) is priced at $272,69, with a total market cap of $2,93T, a P/E ratio of 31,66, and a dividend yield of 0,00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $269,94 and $274,00. The current price is 1,01% above the day's low and 0,47% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 34,55M. Over the past 52 weeks, AMZN has traded between $196,13 to $278,56, and the current price is -2,10% away from the 52-week high.

AMZN Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$271,17
Market Cap$2,93T
Volume34,55M
P/E Ratio31,66
Dividend Yield (TTM)0,00%
Diluted EPS (TTM)8,45
Net Income (FY)$77,67B
Revenue (FY)$716,92B
Earnings Date2026-07-30
EPS Estimate1,82
Revenue Estimate$195,88B
Shares Outstanding10,81B
Beta (1Y)1.468

About AMZN

Amazon.com, Inc. engages in the retail sale of consumer products and subscriptions through online and physical stores in North America and internationally. The company operates through three segments: North America, International, and Amazon Web Services (AWS). Its products offered through its stores include merchandise and content purchased for resale; and products offered by third-party sellers The company also manufactures and sells electronic devices, including Kindle, Fire tablets, Fire TVs, Rings, Blink, eero, and Echo; and develops and produces media content. In addition, it offers programs that enable sellers to sell their products in its stores; and programs that allow authors, musicians, filmmakers, Twitch streamers, skill and app developers, and others to publish and sell content. Further, the company provides compute, storage, database, analytics, machine learning, and other services, as well as fulfillment, advertising, and digital content subscriptions. Additionally, it offers Amazon Prime, a membership program. The company serves consumers, sellers, developers, enterprises, content creators, and advertisers. Amazon.com, Inc. was incorporated in 1994 and is headquartered in Seattle, Washington.
SectorConsumer Cyclical
IndustrySpecialty Retail
CEOAndrew R. Jassy
HeadquartersSeattle,WA,US
Employees (FY)1,57M
Average Revenue (1Y)$454,90K
Net Income per Employee$49,28K

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Amazon (AMZN) Latest News

2026-05-01 09:21US Stocks Added $8.1 Trillion in April, Best Month Since 2020The S&P 500 added $8.1 trillion in market value during April, marking its strongest month since 2020. The index gained 14.2% from its March 30 low, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 15.29%, driven primarily by gains in technology stocks. Tech leaders surged throughout the month: Intel (INTC) doubled in value for its best month in 55 years, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) jumped 74%, Micron Technology (MU) climbed 53%, and Broadcom (AVGO) gained 35%. Alphabet (GOOGL) finished April up 34%, Amazon (AMZN) gained 27%, and Meta Platforms (META) ended higher by nearly 7% despite a Thursday decline. April's rally occurred amid headwinds including Brent crude climbing above $125 per barrel and US economic growth slowing to 2% annualized in Q1, below the expected 2.2%.2026-04-27 10:03U.S. Stock Futures Mixed in Pre-Market Trading; Apple Down 1.35%, Nvidia Up 0.88%Gate News message, April 27 — U.S. stock index futures showed mixed movement in pre-market trading. The Nasdaq rose 0.1%, while the Dow Jones fell 0.18% and the S&P 500 declined 0.05%. Among the "Magnificent Seven" tech stocks, Apple (AAPL) fell 1.35%, Microsoft (MSFT) dropped 0.08%, and Tesla (TSLA) declined 0.22%. Meta (META) also slipped 0.1%. On the upside, Alphabet (GOOGL) gained 0.44%, Amazon (AMZN) rose 0.25%, and Nvidia (NVDA) climbed 0.88%.2026-04-14 15:33Major U.S. Tech Stocks Rise, Meta Gains Over 3% as Markets RallyGate News message, April 14 — Major U.S. tech stocks posted broad gains on Tuesday, with Meta Platforms (META) rising over 3%, Amazon (AMZN) up 3%, Tesla (TSLA) and Alphabet (GOOGL) climbing over 2%, and Nvidia (NVDA) gaining nearly 2%. The three major U.S. equity indices also advanced intraday, with the Nasdaq Composite up 1.22%, the S&P 500 up 0.74%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 0.49%.2026-04-13 14:03美股开盘加密板块普跌,Strategy 下跌 2.01%Gate News 消息,4 月 13 日,根据 msx.com 数据,美股开盘,道指跌 0.5%,标普 500 指数跌 0.22%,纳指跌 0.26%。加密概念股普跌,某 CEX 下跌 1.66%,Robinhood 下跌 1.65%,Bit Digital 下跌 2.91%,Strategy 下跌 2.01%。据悉,msx.com 是一个去中心化 RWA 交易平台,累计已上线数百种 RWA 代币,涵盖 AAPL、AMZN、GOOGL、META、MSFT、NFLX、NVDA 等美股及 ETF 代币标的。

Hot Posts su Amazon (AMZN)

MrDecoder

MrDecoder

15 minuti fa
**Amazon** (AMZN +0.55%) impressed investors with its first-quarter results, which it released last week. There was an abundance of positive updates, both in terms of its performance in the quarter and how it's positioned for future growth. Here are seven reasons it looks like a buy right now. 1. Triple-digit growth in AI ---------------------------- Amazon is already the biggest company in the world by sales, but artificial intelligence (AI) is giving it a major boost. The company is planning to invest $200 billion in capital expenditures (capex) in 2026, and the results are showing up, with AI revenue increasing by triple digits. "We have never seen a technology grow as rapidly as AI," CEO Andy Jassy said on the first-quarter earnings call. Image source: Amazon. Some of Amazon's AI services include SageMaker, which Jassy says improves inference time by 40%, and the Bedrock platform, where clients can engage with a variety of large language models (LLMs) to develop generative AI apps. Bedrock spend increased 170% _consecutively_ in the first quarter. Amazon also offers several turnkey solutions for smaller businesses, including Kiro, which translates natural language into code, Connect, which helps clients set up virtual customer service centers, and Quick, which collates data, improves workflows, and offers insights to help management make informed decisions. 2. Triple-digit growth in chips business ---------------------------------------- Part of Amazon's AI development has been producing its own budget-friendly chips. While it has a strong relationship with **Nvidia**, it offers its cheaper chips for smaller clients that need more cost-effective solutions. This business is also growing by triple digits, and revenue increased 40% quarter over quarter. Jassy pointed out that its growth is masked because it's a self-owned company. The run rate is $20 billion, but as a separate company, it would be $50 billion, and it's probably one of the three top data center chip companies in the world. 3. Accelerating growth in AWS ----------------------------- Since the AI engagement happens on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud platform, AWS sales growth has been accelerating. Sales increased 28% over last year in the first quarter, the highest increase in 15 quarters. What makes that stand out is that it's on a much higher base -- 15 quarters ago, quarterly sales were $20.5 billion, and now, they're $37.6 billion. Jassy noted a correlation between customers who spend on AI and customers who spend on core cloud services, and as AI continues to be a major growth driver, it's also driving overall cloud growth. 4. Double-digit growth in e-commerce ------------------------------------ While AI takes center stage, Amazon isn't letting up in e-commerce. It's constantly making new deals and improving technology, and e-commerce sales are in the double digits despite also having a huge base. Online store sales increased 12% over last year in the first quarter, while third-party sales were up 14%. Some highlights are 600 new "notable" brands that were added to the marketplace in the first quarter, and 40-fold year-over-year growth in the perishables business, making Amazon the second-largest grocer in the U.S. The growing perishables business is driving a positive cycle, where customers who order perishables spend 80% more than customers who don't. Expand NASDAQ: AMZN ------------ Amazon Today's Change (0.55%) $1.49 Current Price $272.66 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $2.9T Day's Range $269.95 - $274.00 52wk Range $196.00 - $278.56 Volume 1.6M Avg Vol 50M Gross Margin 50.60% 5. Faster delivery speeds ------------------------- Amazon is boosting e-commerce engagement and sales by speeding up delivery times. It recently announced one- and three-hour delivery options on more than 90,000 items, with three-hour delivery available in more than 2,000 cities and one-hour delivery available in hundreds of cities. It offers the Amazon Now service, which gets items to customers in as little as 30 minutes, in nine countries and growing. 6. Strong ad sales ------------------ Advertising is also still a high-growth, high-opportunity business. Sales increased 24% over last year in the first quarter, and Amazon is using the power of AI to help advertisers create compelling, low-cost campaigns with pinpointed accuracy for high conversions. It's no longer an Amazon-only business; it services many clients, including streaming clients, through its competitive ad platform. For example, **Netflix** advertisers can use Amazon's exclusive shopper data to tailor ads on Netflix's ad-supported network. 7. Progress in Amazon Leo ------------------------- Finally, it's making progress in Amazon Leo, formerly Project Kuiper, its satellite broadband business. It's set to launch in the coming months, and it has commitments from **Delta Air Lines**, **JetBlue**, NASA, and more. It's also acquiring **GlobalStar**, which will provide it with direct-to-consumer internet services, and it has a deal with **Apple** to supply satellite services for Apple watches and iPhones. These are seven reasons Amazon has tons of potential, but there are many others, and investors can still get in as Amazon approaches a $3 trillion valuation.
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MrDecoder

MrDecoder

1 ore fa
**Amazon** (AMZN +0.55%) and **Microsoft** (MSFT 1.33%) both reported earnings on April 29. The reports continued the tale of two growth stocks heading in different directions. Amazon rallied higher on its earnings, while Microsoft slumped. The e-commerce giant is up by roughly 20% year to date, while Microsoft has dropped by more than 10%. Both companies' earnings reports suggest that this trend is likely to continue.  Image source: Getty Images. Cloud computing is the major story for both companies ----------------------------------------------------- Amazon and Microsoft have invested heavily in artificial intelligence (AI), and their investments have been showing up in their cloud results. Amazon Web Services (AWS) grew by 28% year over year, marking a sustained period of accelerated revenue growth. AWS sales increased by 13% in 2023, 19% in 2024, and 20% last year. Expand NASDAQ: AMZN ------------ Amazon Today's Change (0.55%) $1.49 Current Price $272.66 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $2.9T Day's Range $269.95 - $274.00 52wk Range $196.00 - $278.56 Volume 1.6M Avg Vol 50M Gross Margin 50.60% Microsoft Cloud revenue was up by 29% year over year in the third quarter (Q3) of its fiscal year 2026; that's the quarter that ended March 31. That's slightly higher than AWS' growth rate, but Microsoft Cloud revenue growth has been sitting in the low-to-mid-20% growth range for multiple years. Amazon's cloud platform is accelerating faster while still holding more market share. The positioning, combined with faster acceleration, makes Amazon's cloud segment more promising right now. Exploring other business segments --------------------------------- While cloud computing has been the major story for both companies, their cloud platforms aren't the only revenue drivers. Microsoft groups its businesses into three categories: (1) productivity and business processes, (2) intelligent cloud, and (3) more personal computing. Those segments had year-over-year growth rates of 17%, 30%, and negative 1%, respectively, in the most recent quarter. Microsoft's AI business also reached a $37 billion annual revenue run rate, which represents a 123% year-over-year improvement.  Expand NASDAQ: MSFT ------------ Microsoft Today's Change (-1.33%) $-5.60 Current Price $415.17 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $3.1T Day's Range $414.00 - $418.61 52wk Range $356.28 - $555.45 Volume 1.5M Avg Vol 35M Gross Margin 68.31% Dividend Yield 0.84% Amazon has more high-growth segments. The tech giant's high-margin advertising business grew by 24% year over year in the most recent quarter, and online store sales increased by 12%. Amazon's AI chip business also reached a $20 billion annual revenue run rate, with OpenAI and Anthropic both committing to long-term purchases. Microsoft has smaller business segments within its three business categories. Notable ones include search advertising and LinkedIn, which both delivered low double-digit year-over-year growth rates. Xbox content and services sales dipped by 5% year over year, showing that not every key part of Microsoft's business is growing. Both companies have delivered exceptional overall growth rates due to their AI exposure and cloud computing. However, Amazon has more avenues for long-term revenue growth that are still gaining market share. Amazon's profits are growing at a faster rate --------------------------------------------- One weakness Amazon has historically endured compared to fellow cloud providers Microsoft and **Alphabet** (GOOG +0.41%) (GOOGL +0.66%) is lower profit margins. E-commerce logistics result in low profit margins, with big-box retail giants like **Walmart** (WMT +0.37%) and **Costco** (COST 0.33%) regularly reporting low-single-digit profit margins. Amazon followed the same script for a while, even with its growing cloud platform and online ads. However, Q1 results represented a sharp departure from that storyline, with Amazon delivering 16.7% net profit margin. Although Microsoft's 38.3% net profit margin was higher, Amazon's net profit margin was the highest in its entire history. Most of Amazon's recent growth has come from AWS, online advertising, and AI chips. Those segments are compounding faster than lower-margin parts of Amazon's business and AWS and online ads make up a combined 30% of Amazon's total revenue. Microsoft still delivered higher net income growth than revenue growth, but its 38.4% net profit margin is just a tad higher than its previous mark last year. Amazon's improvements in profitability, meanwhile, are seismic and make the thesis more attractive. Amazon wrapped up Q1 with $181.5 billion in total revenue, compared to Microsoft's $82.9 billion in its quarter. Microsoft slightly edged out Amazon with net income for the quarter, but that lead can evaporate quickly as Amazon's high-margin businesses dictate the company's future results.
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ForkLibertarian

ForkLibertarian

2 ore fa
Key Takeaways ------------- * Sustainability-focused indexes have nearly kept pace with—or even outperformed—the broader US stock market so far in 2026. * Semiconductor stocks drove gains, keeping ESG indexes relatively in line with the broader market, despite characteristic underweights to energy stocks. * Software stocks detracted from the performance of sustainable strategies, while key AI infrastructure companies Monolithic Power and Micron contributed with their energy-efficient power solutions. Big-name software stocks have struggled this year, while energy stocks have soared. This may sound like a recipe for significant underperformance in sustainable investing strategies, which tend to own many tech and few or no energy names. Instead, while some ESG indexes are lagging in 2026, the gap isn’t as wide as investors might expect. The Morningstar US Sustainability Index has gained 4.3% this year through April 24, not far behind the 5.2% return on the broader stock market as measured by the Morningstar US Market Index. Across strategies focused on environmental, social, and governance metrics, there’s been a wide range of returns. The Morningstar Developed Markets Sustainable Activities Involvement Index, which includes companies with at least 50% of revenues from products and services aligned with UN Sustainable Development Goals, is up more than 16%. The Morningstar Developed Markets Paris Aligned Benchmark, which is designed to resemble the broad US equity market while following a decarbonization trajectory, is up about 3.7%. Conditions are challenging for sustainable investing. The Iran war set off a massive rally in oil prices, leading the Morningstar US Energy Index to rise 28.03% through April 24. At the same time, many technology stocks have struggled, as investors have had second thoughts about the impact artificial intelligence could have on long-held competitive advantages, especially among software companies. The Morningstar US Technology Index rose 7.98% in 2026 through April 24, having recovered from significant losses through the end of March. Tech and Energy Exposures Drive Performance Dispersion ------------------------------------------------------ As a group, ESG screens often avoid the energy sector, which is filled with oil and gas names, which are seen as contrary to strategies that invest in companies that don’t harm the environment. Instead, many ESG strategies tend to carry above-market concentrations in sectors such as healthcare and financial services. But when it comes to driving performance, above-market allocations to tech stocks have been more critical. While relative weightings have gone down slightly alongside the boom in AI infrastructure buildouts, there’s still a lot of tech to be found within ESG. At the end of 2021, 27.7% of the US Sustainability Index’s portfolio was made up of technology stocks—including Nvidia NVDA, Microsoft MSFT, and Cisco Systems CSCO—a full percentage point above the US Market Index’s 26.6% concentration. Today, tech stocks are 30.39% of the US Sustainability Index and 32.08% of the US Market Index. At the other end of the spectrum, environmental considerations sharply limit exposure to energy companies. The US Sustainability Index has a 2.83% weighting in energy stocks, the Developed Markets Sustainable Activities Index has none, and the Developed Markets Paris Aligned Benchmark registers a 0.10% weighting. Even the overall market has little exposure to energy stocks; the US Market Index has a 4.08% weighting to the sector. “Sustainable funds generally underperform when energy drives the market,” says Alyssa Stankiewicz, associate director of parent research at Morningstar. In 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drove up energy prices, the US Sustainability Index had its worst performance since its inception in 2016. Energy stocks have had little overall impact on the US Sustainability Index’s performance this year, thanks to the sector’s small weight. Energy contributed 0.67 percentage points to the index’s 4.30% return, not far from the 0.80 percentage points the US Market Index gained from the sector. Instead, big tech stocks (excluding software) helped sustainability strategies keep pace with the broader market. AI Infrastructure and Big Tech Drove Sustainable Investing Strategies’ Performance ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- So far in 2026, tech stocks have contributed 2.42 percentage points to the US Sustainability Index’s 4.30% gain. Three of the index’s top five stocks are semiconductor companies: Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices AMD, and Applied Materials AMAT. Amazon AMZN, which falls into the consumer cyclical sector, was the second-largest contributor to the index’s returns. AMD is up 62.41% this year through April 24. Nvidia rose 11.68%, though the index has over eight times more exposure to that stock—10.38% versus 1.27% for AMD. The double-digit gain on the Developed Markets Sustainable Activities Involvement Index is also notable. “This index selects companies based on what they produce, rather than how they currently operate, including those better positioned to capture the upside of the AI investment cycle, though this can come with the trade-off of concentration risk with outsized growth relative to the other companies in the index,” explains Margaret Stafford, director of product management for index products at Morningstar. The index’s 16.17% year-to-date return was fueled by Micron Technology’s MU 74.12% return, which contributed 6.18 percentage points to the gain. Micron, which makes up 11.38% of the index’s total weight, “is included in the index because more than 50% of its revenues are linked to low‑carbon, energy‑efficient technologies. It has benefitted tremendously from AI infrastructure demand and experienced significant earnings growth,” Stafford says. Another winner for the strategy was Monolithic Power Systems MPWR, which has gained 80.4% this year. The company gets nearly all its revenues from energy‑efficient power solutions, according to Stafford. However, it wasn’t all good news on the tech front. Microsoft was the largest detractor in the US Sustainability Index, subtracting 1.01 percentage points as its second-highest-weighted stock with a 12.01% loss as of April 24. The second-largest detractor, Intuit INTU, subtracted 0.26 points from the index while posting a loss of 39.86%. The index’s overweighting in the financial services and healthcare sectors also detracted.
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