The company's stock rockets 13% after Q3 earnings blow past forecasts.
Cloud growth hits 20% and AI bets start paying off.
Wall Street rewards “efficiency” days after plans for 30,000 layoffs are announced.
Amazon AWS has grown 20% from last year and has investors excited (Amazon).
Investors cheer as Amazon’s Q3 earnings crush expectations and AWS
rebounds, just days after the tech giant announced plans to axe tens of
thousands of corporate jobs.
Wall Street Loves a Good Firing
It’s the kind of timing only Big Tech can pull off. Days after Amazon announced
plans to begin cutting up to 30,000 corporate jobs, its
stock surged 13% in after-hours trading on Thursday as investors celebrated
a blowout third quarter. Cost-cutting, it seems, is the new innovation.
Andy Jassy, President and CEO at Amazon (LinkedIn)
CEO Andy Jassy sounded
predictably bullish: “We continue to see strong momentum and growth across
Amazon as AI drives meaningful improvements in every corner of our business.”
Translation: the robots are coming, and they’re good for margins.
AI Dreams and Power Nightmares
Jassy didn’t stop there. He told investors Amazon has added 3.8
gigawatts of capacity over the past year and plans to double that by 2027. Power,
not chips, appears to be the main bottleneck, though that may soon shift. In
the meantime, Amazon is still snapping up Nvidia’s finest silicon while touting
its homegrown Trainium2 chips, which are now part of a “multibillion-dollar
business” growing 150% quarter over quarter.
Amazon laying off 30,000 people and then beating on earnings so much that the stock gained $250 billion dollars in 1 minute is all you need to know about what AI is going to do to society. pic.twitter.com/Js5JVoBoDu
If AI is the future, Amazon wants a piece of every corner. The
company’s new AI shopping assistant, Rufus, has reached 250 million users this
year, and those users are 60% more likely to make a purchase, according to
Amazon. Meanwhile, its “Help Me Decide” feature is quietly monetizing
indecision, offering algorithmic guidance for the consumer who can’t choose
between air fryers.
Amazon didn’t just cut 14,000 jobs. It cut latency.
The headlines call it an AI layoff. But this isn’t about technology. It’s about throughput.
Wall Street wants leverage. AI gives leadership a new language for delivering it:
Jassy insists Amazon is monetising as fast as they’re bringing in
capacity, and analysts seem convinced. Advertising
revenue hit $17.7 billion, narrowly topping expectations, while retail
sales rose 10%—helped by July’s Prime Day feeding frenzy.
A Tale of Two Headlines
But let’s rewind. Just before this euphoria, Amazon
announced plans to axe up to 30,000 corporate staff, the largest such
layoff in its history. With Wall Street applauding the “leaner” Amazon, it
looks like a grim masterclass in timing.
Still, investors don’t seem bothered by the human cost. The $1.8
billion in severance and $2.5 billion FTC settlement baked into this quarter’s
results barely dented enthusiasm. Amazon’s capital expenditure forecast now
sits at $125 billion for 2025—up from $118 billion earlier this year, with
plans to spend even more in 2026.
Wall Street, of course, rewarded it all with enthusiasm usually
reserved for moon landings or AI breakthroughs. The message is clear: lay off
tens of thousands, beat your numbers, and your stock soars.
The Bottom Line
Amazon has successfully convinced the market that ruthless efficiency
equals visionary leadership. Whether that holds when the next quarter rolls
around, and as the pink slips settle, is another story. For now, investors are
high on AWS acceleration, AI optimism, and the faint smell of redundancy in the
air.
Investors cheer as Amazon’s Q3 earnings crush expectations and AWS
rebounds, just days after the tech giant announced plans to axe tens of
thousands of corporate jobs.
Wall Street Loves a Good Firing
It’s the kind of timing only Big Tech can pull off. Days after Amazon announced
plans to begin cutting up to 30,000 corporate jobs, its
stock surged 13% in after-hours trading on Thursday as investors celebrated
a blowout third quarter. Cost-cutting, it seems, is the new innovation.
Andy Jassy, President and CEO at Amazon (LinkedIn)
CEO Andy Jassy sounded
predictably bullish: “We continue to see strong momentum and growth across
Amazon as AI drives meaningful improvements in every corner of our business.”
Translation: the robots are coming, and they’re good for margins.
AI Dreams and Power Nightmares
Jassy didn’t stop there. He told investors Amazon has added 3.8
gigawatts of capacity over the past year and plans to double that by 2027. Power,
not chips, appears to be the main bottleneck, though that may soon shift. In
the meantime, Amazon is still snapping up Nvidia’s finest silicon while touting
its homegrown Trainium2 chips, which are now part of a “multibillion-dollar
business” growing 150% quarter over quarter.
Amazon laying off 30,000 people and then beating on earnings so much that the stock gained $250 billion dollars in 1 minute is all you need to know about what AI is going to do to society. pic.twitter.com/Js5JVoBoDu
If AI is the future, Amazon wants a piece of every corner. The
company’s new AI shopping assistant, Rufus, has reached 250 million users this
year, and those users are 60% more likely to make a purchase, according to
Amazon. Meanwhile, its “Help Me Decide” feature is quietly monetizing
indecision, offering algorithmic guidance for the consumer who can’t choose
between air fryers.
Amazon didn’t just cut 14,000 jobs. It cut latency.
The headlines call it an AI layoff. But this isn’t about technology. It’s about throughput.
Wall Street wants leverage. AI gives leadership a new language for delivering it:
Jassy insists Amazon is monetising as fast as they’re bringing in
capacity, and analysts seem convinced. Advertising
revenue hit $17.7 billion, narrowly topping expectations, while retail
sales rose 10%—helped by July’s Prime Day feeding frenzy.
A Tale of Two Headlines
But let’s rewind. Just before this euphoria, Amazon
announced plans to axe up to 30,000 corporate staff, the largest such
layoff in its history. With Wall Street applauding the “leaner” Amazon, it
looks like a grim masterclass in timing.
Still, investors don’t seem bothered by the human cost. The $1.8
billion in severance and $2.5 billion FTC settlement baked into this quarter’s
results barely dented enthusiasm. Amazon’s capital expenditure forecast now
sits at $125 billion for 2025—up from $118 billion earlier this year, with
plans to spend even more in 2026.
Wall Street, of course, rewarded it all with enthusiasm usually
reserved for moon landings or AI breakthroughs. The message is clear: lay off
tens of thousands, beat your numbers, and your stock soars.
The Bottom Line
Amazon has successfully convinced the market that ruthless efficiency
equals visionary leadership. Whether that holds when the next quarter rolls
around, and as the pink slips settle, is another story. For now, investors are
high on AWS acceleration, AI optimism, and the faint smell of redundancy in the
air.
Louis Parks has lived and worked in and around the Middle East for much of his professional career. He writes about the meeting of the tech and finance worlds.
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