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Amazon projects quarterly revenue below estimates, shares slide

By Greg Bensinger and Deborah Mary Sophia

(Reuters) -Amazon.com forecast current quarter sales below estimates and said consumers are exercising more caution with their spending in favor of lower-priced goods.

The company's shares fell after hours even though second-quarter profit and cloud computing sales beat Wall Street estimates.

Amazon's CFO Brian Olsavsky said in a call with reporters that consumers were being more cautious with their spending. "They are looking for deals," he said, noting that lower priced products were selling briskly.

Amazon’s online stores sales rose 5% in the second quarter to $55.4 billion, compared with a 7% gain in the first quarter.

One analyst said the softer retail sales were driving the post-market shares sell-off.

"They're showing continued momentum on cloud in terms of re-acceleration and so that's certainly where I think investors will be more positive, but the retail aspect is definitely what's weighing on the stock right now," said Charles Rogers, analyst at M Science.

Amazon's focus on successes in its AWS cloud computing did not cheer investors who sent shares of the Seattle-based company down 5% in extended trading.

Amazon shares had gained 23% this year through the regular close on Thursday.

“We’re continuing to make progress on a number of dimensions, but perhaps none more so than the continued re-acceleration in AWS growth,” CEO Andy Jassy said in a release announcing the results.

Like competitors, Amazon is boosting capital expenditures to invest in infrastructure for and development of artificial intelligence. Olsavsky said spending in this year’s first six months was about $30.5 billion, suggesting about $16.5 billion in the second quarter.

The Seattle retailer is playing catchup with rivals Microsoft, which partners with OpenAI, and as Google in developing its own so-called large language models, which can respond nearly instantaneously to complicated queries or prompts.

It has rolled out a chatbot, dubbed Rufus, designed to help customers make purchasing decisions for specific purposes.

Both Google-parent Alphabet and Microsoft cautioned investors last month that expenses would remain elevated throughout the year to support developing pricey AI software and services. Investors took that as a signal that a payoff from the buzzy technology could take longer than originally hoped.

Amazon's cloud business, Amazon Web Services (AWS), reported a 19% increase in revenue to $26.3 billion for the second quarter, surpassing market estimates of $25.95 billion.

The company expects revenue of $154.0 billion to $158.5 billion for the third quarter, compared with analysts' average estimate of $158.24 billion, according to LSEG data.

Amazon also missed estimates for advertising sales, a closely watched metric as it ramps up competition with rivals Meta and Google. Sales of $12.8 billion in the quarter compare with the average estimate of $13 billion, according to LSEG data. The company earlier this year began placing ads in its Prime Video offering for the first time.

Still, Olsavsky said he was pleased with the advertising results. Those sales grew 20% in the quarter.

(Reporting by Deborah Sophia in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath and David Gregorio)

Source: finance.yahoo.com

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