Amazon plows ahead with
high sales and spending; profit plunges
Send a link to a friend
[July 28, 2017]
By Jeffrey Dastin and Rishika Sadam
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc on Thursday
reported a jump in retail sales along with a profit slump, as its rapid,
costly expansion into new shopping categories and countries showed no
sign of slowing.
The world's largest online retailer posted second-quarter revenue of $38
billion, up 25 percent from a year earlier. The breakneck growth stood
in contrast to the fate of many brick-and-mortar rivals, who have
struggled to find their footing as more people shop online.
Yet Seattle-based Amazon posted a 77 percent drop in quarterly income,
and even said it could lose up to $400 million in operating profit
during the current quarter. Beyond reflecting retail's notoriously thin
margins, the forecast signaled Amazon would invest heavily to maintain
its dominance.
Shares - up nearly 40 percent this year - fell 3.2 percent to $1,012.68
in after-hours trading. The company had earned 40 cents per share
instead of $1.42 as analysts had expected, according to Thomson Reuters
I/B/E/S.
"Q3 is generally a high investment period," Chief Financial Officer
Brian Olsavsky said on a call with reporters, citing spending on
fulfillment and hiring to prepare the company for the Christmas holiday
rush. He added, "Our video content spend will continue to grow, both
sequentially and quarter over quarter."
Indeed, investing in faster shipping and video has become a refrain of
sorts for the company. While some expected Amazon's spending in these
areas - stepped up since last year - to ease, the company is plowing
ahead to reinforce its fast-shipping club Prime.
Olsavsky said video content included with Prime membership has helped
Amazon retain subscribers and persuade those on a free trial to sign up
for $99 per year in the United States. A cornerstone of the company's
strategy, Prime encourages shoppers to buy more goods, more often from
Amazon.
Subscription sales including Prime fees rose 51 percent in the second
quarter to $2.2 billion. Cowen & Co analysts have estimated that more
than 50 percent of U.S. households will have Prime membership by the end
of 2017.
"The fact that they are investing on so many fronts right now just
speaks to the opportunity that they have before them," said Edward Jones
analyst Josh Olson. "We are giving them the benefit of doubt here
because they have executed so well historically."
NEW FRONTIERS AND COSTS
Shares of Amazon had touched a record high of $1,083.31 earlier on
Thursday, helping Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos briefly unseat
fellow tech billionaire Bill Gates to become the world's richest person,
according to Forbes. His wealth has followed the meteoric rise of
Amazon's stock.
[to top of second column] |
An employee works at Amazon's Prime Now fulfillment centre in
Singapore July 27, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su
From its origins as an online bookseller, Amazon has jumped into areas
that historically had barriers to e-commerce, from apparel to
appliances. The specter of Amazon's disruption now hangs over a dizzying
array of industries.
Grocery is the latest to feel the threat. The company said last month it
would buy Whole Foods Market Inc for $13.7 billion, pending regulatory
approval.
Olsavsky declined to discuss in detail the company's strategy for the
upscale grocer but said, "We really think it will be a big boost for us
as we expand our grocery and consumables offering."
Amazon also announced its two-hour delivery service Prime Now in
Singapore on Wednesday, part of its ongoing investment to be a major
retail player in Asia. Amazon has committed to investing $5 billion in
India and earlier this year said it would take on commerce in the Middle
East by acquiring Dubai-based Souq.com.
Even excluding the proposed Whole Foods deal, Amazon forecast an
operating income of between $300 million and a loss of $400 million for
the current quarter. Analysts had expected $931 million, according to
FactSet StreetAccount.
"You tend to expect companies like this to grow their expenses at a
slower rate than their revenues," said Michael Pachter, analyst at
Wedbush Securities. "G&A up 50 (percent) is crazy," referring to general
and administrative costs in the second quarter.
Operating expenses rose 28.2 percent to $37.33 billion in the second
quarter ended June 30. Costs for fulfillment, marketing and technology
all rose.
Baird Equity Research analyst Colin Sebastian said in a note Amazon's
profit margin was "a bit mixed" but added, "accelerating growth in core
retail and relatively steady growth in AWS underpin our positive
long-term view."
Sales from Amazon Web Services, the company's cash cow and the biggest
cloud-computing business in the world, rose 42 percent to $4.1 billion.
The subsidiary will expand in France, Sweden and China in the near
future, Olsavsky said.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco and Rishika Sadam in
Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Lisa Shumaker)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |