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Amazon Q3 earnings updates: Stock surges 9% on earnings beat and strong cloud growth
October 30, 2025
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy
Noah Berger/Noah Berger
Amazon’s stock popped more than 9% on Thursday afternoon after the company reported huge growth in the third quarter, including in its cloud business, Amazon Web Services.
CEO Andy Jassy said AWS was “growing at a pace we haven’t seen since 2022.” He also called out particularly strong demand for its AI offerings.
“We continue to see strong demand in AI and core infrastructure,” Jassy said.
The company’s results exceeded Wall Street’s expectations, offering investors a sigh of relief, particularly as Amazon’s stock has been the laggard of the Magnificent Seven this year.
The report came after Amazon earlier this week said it would be cutting 14,000 jobs in one of the biggest rounds of layoffs in its history.
Amazon’s call with analysts is scheduled for 5 p.m. ET.
Investing.com: AWS results reach fastest growth rate since 2022
Amazon’s third-quarter results show the company is making progress in adding AI to its operations, Investing.com’s senior analyst Jesse Cohen said.
“Although AWS sales fell slightly short of projections, the division still achieved its fastest growth pace since 2022, underscoring the robust demand for cloud services,” Cohen wrote.
He added: “As AI continues to play a pivotal role in Amazon’s trajectory, the company is well-positioned for continued innovation and expansion.”
AWS seems to be pushing Amazon’s stock higher after hours
Amazon shares were up more than 9% after the company reported its earnings Thursday afternoon.
One factor could be CEO Andy Jassy’s comments on AWS.
“AWS is growing at a pace we haven’t seen since 2022, re-accelerating to 20.2% YoY,” Jassy said in Amazon’s earnings release. “We continue to see strong demand in AI and core infrastructure, and we’ve been focused on accelerating capacity — adding more than 3.8 gigawatts in the past 12 months.”
Amazon is spending close to $2 billion on severance after Tuesday’s layoffs
Amazon’s third quarter included two big one-time charges. The first is $1.8 billion in estimated severance costs “primarily related to planned role eliminations.”
The other was its previously announced $2.5 billion settlement with the FTC over its Prime membership program.
The key numbers: Amazon beats Wall Street’s estimates for Q3
Third quarter results:
Net sales: $180.2 billion, +13% y/y vs. estimate $177.82 billion
EPS: $1.95 vs. y/y, estimate $1.58
Online stores net sales: $67.4 billion, +10% y/y vs. estimate $66.93 billion
Physical Stores net sales: $5.58 billion, +7 y/y vs. estimate $5.56 billion
Third-Party Seller Services net sales: $42.49 billion, +12% y/y vs. estimate $42.05 billion
Subscription Services net sales: $12.57 billion, +11% y/y vs. estimate $12.49 billion
Amazon Web Services net sales estimate: $33 billion, +20% y/y vs. $32.39 billion
North America net sales estimate: $106.3 billion, +11% y/y vs. $104.96 billion
International net sales: $40.9 billion, +14% y/y vs. estimate $40.77 billion
Operating income: $17.4 billion vs. estimate $19.72 billion
Operating margin: 9.7% vs. estimate 11.1%
Fourth quarter guidance:
Net sales: $206 billion to $213 billion vs. estimate $208.45 billion
Operating income: $21 billion to $26 billion vs. estimate $23.78 billion
Source: Bloomberg and company filings
We could get insight into Amazon’s holiday plans and early results
Amazon’s Prime Day event in October has become an early chance for shoppers to score holiday deals, and other retailers have even debuted their own versions. On Thursday’s call, Amazon could provide an early glimpse into how holiday shopping is shaping up.
Expect Amazon to play a big role once the holiday shopping season starts in earnest. About 73% of shoppers surveyed by marketing platform Omnisend said that Amazon is their go-to source for deals on Black Friday and Cyber Monday.
Ads have been a bright spot for Amazon
Amazon’s ad business has been finding potential growth opportunities lately.
A recent deal with Netflix will let brands buy ad slots on the streamer through Amazon’s own demand-side platform. The move rattled shares of adtech rival The Trade Desk after it was announced.
Expect an update on Amazon’s capex and AI investments
Amazon is expected to give a capital expenditures update on its earnings call this afternoon. Last quarter, Amazon’s capex totaled $31.4 billion, and the company said the figure was “reasonably representative” of its quarterly capex rate for the rest of the year. It’s largely driven by investments in AWS — particularly AI and tech infrastructure — and Amazon’s fulfillment and transportation network.
Capex growth is a hot-button issue across Big Tech. The following chart shows how spending stacks up so far.
Amazon’s grocery business got a shuffle this summer
Investors will be listening for any details that CEO Andy Jassy and the company offer about Amazon’s grocery business in light of a recent reboot.
In June, a memo obtained by Business Insider showed that Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh, and Amazon Go were being united under a single “One Grocery” operation eight years after Amazon acquired Whole Foods for $13.7 billion.
The company launched a $5 private-label grocery line earlier this month aimed at luring value hunters away from Walmart and Aldi.
Wedbush says get ready for a highly bullish report
Wedbush has high hopes for the tech giant heading into the call, maintaining a $280 price target, up from its previous target of $250 a share.
The firm’s analysts predict that it is poised for a breakout in 2026 and likely to shake off the volatility that has weighed on the stock recently. They expect Amazon to reach $99.6 billion in full-year revenue, and predict Q3 revenue of $20.1 billion.
“Heading into the print, we are most focused on AWS momentum and emerging AI monetization, rising operating margins supported by the mix shift to higher-margin revenue, capex requirements to support infrastructure and AI investments, and persistent growth within the advertising business,” Wedbush analysts wrote in a preview note.
They also cited several immediate-term catalysts, including savings from automation and robotics progress, and the commercialization of Alexa’s new AI capabilities.
Got more questions about Amazon’s layoffs? Check out our livestream at 2 p.m.
Business Insider’s Chief Tech Correspondent Eugene Kim and Chief Correspondent Aki Ito will join Deputy Executive Editor Dan DeFrancesco to talk about Amazon’s decision this week to lay off 14,000 employees in a livestream at 2 p.m. ET. AI’s role in the layoffs will be a key topic.
Got a question that you want the panel to answer? Send it to moderator Dan DeFrancesco.
Amazon’s layoffs raise a big question for Wall Street
Amazon said on Tuesday that it would cut 14,000 corporate jobs in one of the biggest rounds of layoffs in the company’s history.
It raised a big question for Wall Street: Is the company cutting jobs because growth is stalling, or is the retail giant’s big bet on AI making it more efficient? Business Insider’s Alistair Barr wrote in Thursday’s Tech Memo newsletter that Amazon’s latest quarterly earnings report could answer that all-important question.
Revenue growth for Amazon Web Services, the company’s crucial cloud business, is the number to watch when Amazon reports this afternoon, Barr wrote.
For the third quarter, Wall Street expects AWS revenue to increase 18% year over year to $32.4 billion, according to Bloomberg.
UBS analysts see headwinds waning
UBS analysts are feeling optimistic heading into the report, although they anticipate some “noise” around operating income due to the company’s recent $2.5 billion settlement with the FTC.
The bank recently raised its price target for Amazon stock from $271 to $279, maintaining its Buy rating. While analysts said that they are waiting to see investment proof points from AWS, they still see the area as a likely growth driver for Amazon, as they expect multiple headwinds to wane in the near future.
“Overall, we continue to see the potential for upside across Amazon’s business segments, including e-commerce, cloud, advertising, and Kuiper / low earth orbit satellites,” analysts wrote in a recent earnings preview.
AWS, Amazon’s growth engine, is facing AI challenges
Investors will want to hear more about AWS’s latest AI strategy, including what it’s doing to attract new customers.
Early-stage startups are skipping traditional cloud spending and heading straight to model-training tools and niche providers. These companies are Amazon’s “blind spot,” according to an internal document seen by Business Insider. Amazon has traditionally relied on venture capital firms to find startups that could be new clients.
AWS also hired a new vice president of security services and observability this month, a sign that the unit is trying to improve security around its AI products.
JPMorgan flags concerns about AI plans
JPMorgan analysts said that while they believe Amazon has done a good job executing on retail sales and margin expansion, they’re worried about its positioning in the booming generative AI space.
“There is concern around AMZN’s GenAI positioning/strategy, relative gap to Azure/Google Cloud growth, & trajectory of 2H AWS growth pick-up,” they said. “There is also concern around the impact of tariffs & changes to the de minimis exemption on demand & OI margins.”
However, the analysts add that AWS growth acceleration will likely continue, and said that they expect AI supply chain gaps to ease, which they see as bullish for Amazon.
JPMorgan maintains an overweight rating and a $265 price target for Amazon stock.
Amazon lags the Magnificent 7 in stock returns
Joe Ciolli/Business Insider
Amazon ranks last among the Magnificent Seven tech companies — and the broader S&P 500 — when it comes to stock performance over the last five years, Business Insider’s Joe Ciolli wrote in Thursday’s First Trade newsletter.
Amazon’s stock has returned 43% over that period, behind Meta’s 168%, Alphabet’s 253%, and Nvidia’s mammoth 1,490%.
On Wall Street, some interpret Amazon’s position on that chart as a sign that its AI strategy is struggling to compete with rivals.
Bank of America is optimistic about progress in key areas
BofA analysts are upbeat heading into the report, even as doubts swirl around Amazon’s AI strategy.
“Given healthy retail sales, strength in Online advertising, and July AWS layoffs, we see potential for operating income upside and are 4% above Street for GAAP operating profit at $20.4bn vs $19.7bn,” the analysts wrote.
“We believe Street expectations are for around 1-2% beat on US retail, AWS growth at 18-18.5% based on 3P data, and op. profit slightly above the high end of Amazon’s 3Q guidance range.”
The bank maintains a Buy rating on Amazon stock and a $272 price target, implying 21% upside from Wednesday’s price.
Wall Street analysts estimate Amazon will report revenue of $177.8 billion and EPS of $1.58 for Q3
Third Quarter
Net sales estimate $177.82 billion
Online stores net sales estimate $66.93 billion
Physical Stores net sales estimate $5.56 billion
Third-Party Seller Services net sales estimate $42.05 billion
Subscription Services net sales estimate $12.49 billion
Amazon Web Services net sales estimate $32.39 billion
North America net sales estimate $104.96 billion
International net sales estimate $40.77 billion
Third-party seller services net sales excluding F/X estimate +10.8%
Subscription services net sales excluding F/X estimate +10.7%
Amazon Web Services net sales excluding F/X estimate +17.9%
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