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Jul 26, 2019
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Amazon's push for one-day delivery dents profits, costs up 21%

By
Reuters API
Published
Jul 26, 2019

Amazon.com on Thursday reported its first profit miss in two years and said income would slump in the current quarter, as the online retailer ramps up spending on one-day delivery to spark sales growth.


Revenue for the world’s largest online retailer jumped 20% to $63.4 billion in the just-ended second quarter, Amazon said. Analysts were expecting $62.5 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv - Reuters


Shares fell more than 2% in after-hours trade.

Seattle-based Amazon has drawn more than 100 million paid subscribers to its loyalty club Prime by releasing original TV shows, equipping more gadgets with its voice assistant Alexa and offering quick shipping for countless goods, including groceries from its subsidiary Whole Foods Market.

Now, it is investing heavily to halve delivery times to one day for Prime members, in an effort to stay ahead of rivals such as Walmart Inc that have marketed two-day shipping with no subscription fees.

Jeff Bezos, Amazon's chief executive, said in a news release that the company's sales growth was accelerating, citing one-day delivery.

The cost of that program slightly exceeded the $800 million Amazon had forecast it would spend in the second quarter, Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky said on a call with reporters.

“Right now we are seeing an increasing and ramping cost penalty, and that’s what’s built into the Q3 guidance,” Olsavsky said, adding that the company would continue to roll out one-day delivery in North America and Europe in the coming quarters.

Revenue for the world’s largest online retailer jumped 20% to $63.4 billion in the just-ended second quarter, Amazon said. Analysts were expecting $62.5 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

The money Amazon is sinking into delivery reflects how it is not immune to competition, said Neil Saunders, managing director at research firm GlobalData.
“It is a necessary evil,” Saunders said. “Amazon exists in a world where a lot of retailers have the advantage of allowing customers to pick things up the same day in stores,” with far larger brick-and-mortar footprints than Amazon’s subsidiary Whole Foods has.

The U.S. Justice Department said Tuesday it would look into whether Big Tech engaged in any anticompetitive practices, including in online retail.
Olsavsky declined to discuss the matter.

SLOWING CLOUD?

Amazon’s revenue growth, still smaller than a year prior, partly reflects the changing nature of Amazon’s business. The company is gradually moving away from low-margin retail toward a marketplace model where it collects lucrative fees for helping other merchants on its site ship and advertise their products.

Revenue from seller services grew 23% to $12.0 billion in the second quarter, while ad and other sales increased 37% to $3.0 billion.

Though profitable - Amazon earned $2.6 billion in the quarter versus expectations of $2.8 billion - its dual retail and marketplace business model has drawn scrutiny.

Earlier this month, the European Commission launched an antitrust probe into whether Amazon’s use of other merchants’ data offered an unfair advantage to its retail unit, which has made private-label versions of popular products.

Meanwhile, Amazon’s cloud unit slightly slowed it breakneck pace of growth from enterprises paying the company to store their data and handle their computing operations. Sales for Amazon Web Services rose 37% to $8.4 billion in the second quarter. AWS growth rate has been consistently above 40% since 2015.

CFO Olsavsky said revenue was strong in the quarter, though sales cycles fluctuate depending on the timing of customers’ migration to the cloud.

“We’re growing faster than anyone” on a dollar basis, he said.

This was no help to Amazon in offsetting an uptick in investments that it planned for this year. On top of its bet on faster shipping, the company as usual is expected to spend more in the current quarter to prepare for the winter holiday shopping season.

It has hoped more marketing would drive sales, too, most recently putting on a concert with pop star Taylor Swift to promote Prime Day, its summer sales event.

These bets and others further afield, like its investments in electric and self-driving car companies earlier this year, show how Amazon has been happy to forgo short-term profit for long-term gains.

The company for years was known for having rollercoaster results. While the rise of its profitable cloud and advertising businesses allayed most investor concern and its 2017 investments paid off through 2018, Amazon has said it would step up spending again this year.

Overall for the third quarter, Amazon said it expects operating profit will be between $2.1 billion and $3.1 billion versus $3.7 billion the year prior. Analysts were expecting $4.4 billion, according to analytics firm FactSet.

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