Weak Amazon, Alphabet results ignite growth worries
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[October 27, 2018]
By Supantha Mukherjee and Sonam Rai
(Reuters) - Shares of Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>
dropped by the most in four years on Friday after its outlook for
holiday season sales missed targets, fanning concerns that Wall Street's
tech darlings are finally starting to face stronger competition.
The third-quarter results were the second time running that billionaire
Jeff Bezos' firm had fallen short of sales targets and, allied to a
similar disappointment from Google-owner Alphabet <GOOGL.O>, they sent a
shockwave through stock markets.
There were no ratings downgrades from the Wall Street analysts who have
almost universally backed the companies' long-term prospects but several
said there were signs that both were beginning to face tougher
competition from tech peers as well as the retail companies Amazon has
bullied in recent years.
The fall of as much as 9 percent in shares knocked more than $80 billion
off Amazon's market value and relegated it behind Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O>
and Apple Inc <AAPL.O> in terms of market value.
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Now that the Seattle-based firm has devoured retail players like
Borders, Sears and Toys 'R' Us, it is facing bigger challenges from
multinationals who are making substantial investments to compete, D.A.
Davidson & Co analyst Thomas Forte said.
"Google, Microsoft, and Walmart ... are more difficult to kill," he
said.
Shares in Alphabet dropped about 2 percent after it fell short on sales
after beating estimates for the past eight quarters.
Revenue from Amazon's international business, which brings in 27.5
percent of total sales, was at the heart of the shortfall in results,
growth halving to 13.4 percent compared to the previous quarter.
"We don't see any real structural issue with Amazon but nearly every
line in the business is decelerating a tad and we typically see another
deceleration in retail in 4Q, hence are struggling to identify a
catalyst," Barclays analyst Ross Sandler said.
Wolfe Research analyst Scott Mushkin saw two possible reasons Amazon
forecast a holiday shopping quarter weaker than anticipated by Wall
Street.
"They are worried about the macro. The second thing is they're worried
about competition," he said, noting that there were both signs of a
slowing economy and that major retailers were aggressively deploying
strategies to compete with Amazon for holiday sales.
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The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics centre in Boves,
France, August 8, 2018. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File Photo
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Amazon expected sales in the holiday quarter leading up to Christmas to rise
between 10 percent and 20 percent, to as much as $72.5 billion, while analysts
on average had expected $73.9 billion, according to Refinitiv data.
Its operating profit forecast of between $2.1 billion and $3.6 billion also came
in below consensus estimates.
Several analysts called the company's outlook conservative and said any outright
dip in profit seems highly unlikely.
"Overall, Amazon's growth trajectory remains solid, including advertising,
grocery, pharmacy, and specialty retail, as well as Amazon Business ($10 billion
in sales in eight countries) and Amazon Web Services," Telsey Advisory Group
analysts said.
Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft all continued growth in cloud services but with
signs of deceleration.
In the latest quarterly reports, Microsoft’s cloud computing business Azure
marked revenue growth of 76 percent, down from 89 percent in the previous
quarter. Google’s other revenue, which includes its cloud business, grew 29
percent on year, 4 percent below estimates of Cowen & Co. analysts. Amazon’s
cloud business saw a 46 percent rise in revenue to $6.68 billion, only narrowly
edging past estimates of $6.67 billion.
“In general the cloud business will continue to grow but not at the previous
pace and that’s an indication of the market maturity,” says Sid Nag, senior
director, cloud technologies and services, Gartner Research.
Shares of the company were down 7.2 percent at $1,654 in midday trade.
(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee, Sonam Rai and Jasmine I S in Bengaluru and
Jane Lee in Oakland, California; editing by Peter Henderson, Patrick Graham and
Bill Trott)
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