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Ahead of Amazon’s (AMZN) earnings, UBS said that the online retailer is the “cleanest Mag7 name to own”, although in retrospect it may also be the cleanest Ma7 name to sell, which is what is taking place after hours when the stock tumbled after it missed on Q4 cloud revenue and also guided well below estimates.First, here is a big picture of what the company reported for the just concluded 4th quarter:
- Online stores net sales $75.56 billion, +7.1% y/y, beating estimates of $74.71 billion
- Physical Stores net sales $5.58 billion, +8.3% y/y, beating estimates of $5.4 billion
- Subscription Services net sales $11.51 billion, +9.7% y/y, missing estimates of $11.58 billion
- Subscription services net sales excluding F/X +10% vs. +13% y/y, estimate +10.3%
- North America net sales $115.59 billion, +9.5% y/y, beating estimates of $114.27 billion
- International net sales $43.42 billion, +7.9% y/y, beating estimates of $44.13 billion
- Third-Party Seller Services net sales $47.49 billion, +9% y/y, missing estimates of $48.02 billion
- Third-party seller services net sales excluding F/X +9% vs. +19% y/y, estimate +10.2%
So far so good (with some exceptions). But what caught the market’s attention first was Amazon’s AWS revenue, which came in just below estimates:
Turning to operating results, here the results were uniformly solid:
As for fulfillment expenses, these came in slightly below estimates, while the seller unit mix was slightly higher than expected:
Of the above, the most notable highlight – as per our preview – was AWS which grew revenue by 19% for a second consecutive quarter to $28.79BN, which however was just below the sellside estimate of $28.82BN. So maybe a little weakness here similar to Microsoft MSFT.
Still, if revenue growth for AWS was a bit light, the 36.9% margin likely offset it, beating estimates of 34.7%, but below last quarter’s print of 38.1%. Elsewhere, North American profit rose to $25 billion, resulting in a profit of 6.44%, the highest since at least 2015 (although one wonders how much higher this number can rise). Meanwhile, international margins dipped to 3.03% from 3.63%.
As a result of the jump in North American profits, Amazon’s consolidated operating margin rebounded strongly, and after dipping modestly in Q2 from the previous record, rose to a new all time high of 11.3% in Q4.
However, while the above data was mixed to modestly solid, it was the company’s guidance that led to an after hours drop in the stock; that’s because the company projected profit and revenue in the current quarter both of which came in below Wall Street expectations:
If accurate, that would mean Q4 revenue will grow at the slowest pace since the global financial crisis.
And while any other day the cloud miss and ugly guidance would have been enough to send the stock tumbling – as it did for a bit, sliding as much as 7% after hours, the unprecedented retail BTFD kneejerk reaction has taken the stock after hours and remarkable pushed it back flat on the session as the market plumbs new levels of stupidity. More By This Author:At Least 40,000 Fed Workers Accept ‘DOGE Buyout’ As Deadline Looms TonightUS Services Sector Surveys Plunged In January As Prices Rose & Orders FellJob Openings Unexpectedly Crater By More Than 500K As Wheels Start To Fall Off The Job Market