
Amazon has recently responded to mounting skepticism from financial analysts concerning its considerable capital outlays for artificial intelligence and data center infrastructure. The tech giant maintains that these aggressive investments are crucial and are already translating into profitable returns.
During a recent financial disclosure, Amazon's Chief Financial Officer, Brian Olsavsky, addressed queries about the long-term profitability of these significant capital allocations. He highlighted the rapid deployment and utilization of new Amazon Web Services (AWS) capacity, particularly for AI services, underscoring strong client demand and extensive commitments.
Olsavsky further noted that despite increased spending on AI infrastructure, AWS continues to maintain strong operating margins, which stood at 35% in the last quarter—an increase of 40 basis points year-over-year. He acknowledged that margins might fluctuate but assured that operational efficiencies and cost management strategies are in place to counteract AI-related depreciation costs.
A major portion of Amazon's capital expenditure this year is directed towards AWS, with a primary focus on AI infrastructure. This spending also supports the unexpectedly rapid expansion of non-AI related workloads. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy emphasized the immense potential, citing AWS's 24% year-over-year growth and its impressive annualized revenue run rate of $142 billion.
Jassy articulated that the rapid monetization of newly installed AI capacity represents a unique market opportunity. He also pointed out that the increasing adoption of AI is accelerating the shift to cloud computing, as businesses require cloud-based data and applications to effectively scale their AI initiatives.
Jassy reiterated Amazon's competitive advantage in building and expanding AWS, which includes the development of proprietary chips and networking solutions. He anticipates that AI economics will improve over time through the scaling of inference workloads, increased utilization, and the normalization of pricing, confident in a strong return on invested capital.
Amazon surpassed fourth-quarter revenue forecasts, reporting net sales of $213.39 billion, a 14% increase from the previous year. This performance exceeded Wall Street's expectation of $211.30 billion. Driven by robust demand across its core operations and emerging technologies like AI, custom chips, robotics, and low Earth orbit satellites, Amazon plans to invest approximately $200 billion in capital expenditures by 2026.
Following these announcements, Amazon's shares closed at $222.69 but experienced an 11.20% dip in after-hours trading to $197.75. Despite this, Amazon shares are highly rated on quality metrics and show a positive price trend across various timeframes according to Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings.