Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: UPDATE 5-Amazon shares set record after strong quarterly profit

Reuters: Hot Stocks
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 5-Amazon shares set record after strong quarterly profit
Jan 30th 2013, 00:21

Tue Jan 29, 2013 7:21pm EST

  * Better-than-expected income, margins push shares to record      * Higher-margin areas like e-books, cloud computing helped  drive profit      * Third-party marketplace growth boosts margins      * Executives tout digital content sales growth      * Warehouses closer to shoppers help Amazon control shipping  costs-CFO     (Adds more details from results and analyst conference call)      By Alistair Barr      SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc   shares hit a record on Tuesday after it reported  better-than-expected quarterly profit, fueled by the growth of  higher-margin businesses during the fiercely competitive holiday  quarter.      The world's largest Internet retailer said that its cloud  computing services, video content sales and its aggressive  expansion in e-books helped increase profitability.      In addition, a growing network of warehouses or fulfillment  centers closer to customers held down shipping costs as it vied  with Wal-Mart Stores Inc and other major retailers for  consumer dollars over the holidays.       Chief Executive Jeff Bezos highlighted the Kindle's e-book  business, calling it a multi-billion dollar category that grew  about 70 percent in 2012. Its traditional physical book business  rose about five percent in the same period, he noted.       "We're now seeing the transition we've been expecting,"  Bezos said in the company's results statement.          Profits have shrunk in recent years as the company invested  for longer-term growth, building massive fulfillment centers,  developing a Kindle Fire tablet hardware and digital content  business in competition with Apple Inc, and expanding  into Internet-based cloud services.      The fourth-quarter profit results suggested that Amazon may  be able to generate attractive returns from such spending,  analysts said.      "The fourth-quarter operating income was up more than  expected," said R.J. Hottovy, an equity analyst at Morningstar.  "This supports the bull case that Amazon can monetize its growth  over the longer term."      The Seattle-based company said operating income jumped 56  percent to $405 million in the fourth quarter, compared with  $260 million in the fourth quarter of 2011.      Amazon's stock climbed 9 percent to $284 in after-hours  trading and touched $288 earlier in the session. It hit a record  of $284.72 in regular trading on Jan. 25.              MARGIN FOCUS      The company also said fourth-quarter revenue rose 22 percent  to $21.27 billion as it grabbed a big share of online spending  during the holidays. But it was the profit that initially caught  Wall Street's eye.      "It was a much better-than-expected gross margin, a strong  forward indicator to drive margin expansion. What is really  important is gross profit dollars and that line is stronger,"  said Ken Sena at Evercore Partners.      The gross profit margins were 24 percent in the fourth  quarter, compared with Wall Street expectations of about 22  percent.       "Incredibly strong margins," said Jordan Rohan, an analyst  at Stifel Nicolaus. Amazon generated the highest quarterly gross  margin in its North America business in more than three years,  he noted.       Amazon mainly operates as a retailer, buying physical  products at wholesale prices, storing them and then selling at a  slight mark-up to consumers online.      But the company has expanded into other businesses that are  potentially more profitable, including cloud computing, digital  content and acting as an online marketplace for other merchants.      These newer businesses are growing faster than the company's  original retail operations, boosting profitability.              3P GROWTH      The improved profitability was partly driven by the growth  of Amazon's online marketplace for third-party merchants, known  as 3P.       This business accounted for 39 percent of total unit sales  in the fourth quarter, up from 36 percent a year earlier. Total  unit sales rose 32 percent in the holiday quarter, while 3P unit  sales climbed more than 40 percent, compared with the fourth  quarter of 2011, according to Amazon Chief Financial Officer Tom  Szkutak.       When Amazon sells products itself, it reports the total  value of the sale as revenue. The cost of that product is then  subtracted for a gross profit margin. When a third-party  merchant sells products on Amazon's marketplace, the company  gets a cut of that sale. That commission is reported as revenue,  and most of it falls straight to its bottom line as profit.      "That shift means lower revenue numbers but much higher  profit margins," said Rohan.             AWS, ADS, DIGITAL GOODS      Amazon's cloud computing business, Amazon Web Services, or  AWS, is also thought to be higher margin than the company's  original retail business.      Amazon also runs an online advertising business that is also  considered a lot more profitable.       These businesses are in the company's North America Other  category, which generated fourth-quarter revenue of $769  million, up 68 percent from a year earlier.       "AWS is growing very fast and that is certainly impacting  our operating profit," said CFO Szkutak.      The financial chief also highlighted Amazon's newer digital  content businesses, particularly its video streaming offering.       Amazon has invested heavily in TV shows and movies to stream  over the Internet. It has partly packaged this as a free service  to consumers who have subscribed to its Prime two-day shipping  service. But customers can also pay to stream other video, often  newer movies.       "The percentage of Prime customers who were watching free  content through Prime instant video has gone up dramatically  year-over-year," Szkutak said during a conference call with  analysts. "We've also increased Prime membership dramatically  year-over-year. They are also purchasing paid content."            SHIPPING COSTS FALL      One of Amazon's biggest investments in recent years has been  focused on building lots of fulfillment centers closer to  shoppers.       It costs a lot to set up these giant warehouses, but over  the long term, Amazon hopes they will help the company reduce  its shipping costs.       That strategy shows signs of success in the fourth quarter.  Net shipping costs were 4.5 percent of sales in the period, down  from 5.4 percent a year early, the company reported.       "Over the past few years, we have expanded our fulfillment  network to the point where we are closer to customers and you're  seeing that reflected in our transportation costs," Szkutak CFO  said.        (Reporting By Alistair Barr and Alexei Oreskovic in San  Francisco; Editing by Bernard Orr)  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.