I hope the President doesn't see this...

WVUCOOPER

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Dec 10, 2002
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Wall Street is buzzing over Amazon's impressive March quarter results.

Analysts are growing more confident over the prospects for many of Amazon's new businesses including subscription services, advertising and cloud computing.

The e-commerce juggernaut reported better-than-expected first-quarter earnings results Thursday. It also gave profit guidance for its second quarter significantly above Wall Street expectations.


Amazon shares soared 7.2 percent in Friday's premarket session to $1,627. If the shares open at these levels, it would set a new all-time high for the stock.

Goldman Sachs reiterated its buy rating for the company, saying Amazon is still in the "early stages" in many of its key markets.

"We are in the sweet spot between Amazon investment cycles where new fulfillment/data centers are driving accelerating revenue growth while incremental capacity utilization is driving margin expansion," analyst Heath Terry wrote in a note to clients Friday. "We still remain in the early stages of the shift of compute to the cloud and the transition of traditional retail online and, in our opinion, the market is underestimating the long-term financial benefit of both to Amazon."

Terry raised his price target for Amazon shares to $2,000 from $1,825, representing 32 percent upside from Thursday's close.

Several analysts expressed optimism over the company's Amazon Prime price hike. The company announced on Thursday it plans to increase the price of its Prime membership to $119 from $99 for one year starting on May 11.

"We are raising our topline and operating margin estimates for FY:18 and beyond reflecting the continued momentum in Prime and accelerating growth in its two more profitably businesses, AWS and advertising," Stifel analyst Scott Devitt wrote in a note to clients Friday.

Devitt raised his price target to $2,020 from $1,800 and reaffirmed his buy rating for the company's stock.

J.P. Morgan believes consumers will stick with the service even with its higher cost.

"The last time AMZN raised the price of Prime was in March 2014, & we do not expect the company to get much pushback from consumers given the increasing value of the service," analyst Doug Anmuth wrote in a note to clients Friday.

UBS predicted Amazon's Prime price increase will benefit the company's subscription services sales growth.

"We believe that strong Prime member growth, and fast seller FBA [Fulfillment by Amazon] adoption will continue to advance Amazon's Prime + FBA flywheel effect that is likely to be supportive of a ~20% rev growth CAGR ('17-'22)," analyst Eric Sheridan wrote in a note to clients Thursday. Our "upward revision [of subscription services revenue] also reflects announced Prime membership fee increase."

In similar fashion, Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicted strong earnings growth from the company's high-profit margin new businesses.

"Amazon's share in its key markets continues to expand, supported by strong fulfillment infrastructure and Prime lock-in, while the earlier stage higher margins businesses of AWS and advertising are contributing to more meaningful profit growth," analyst Justin Post wrote in a note to clients Friday.

Post reiterated his buy rating and increased his price target to $1,840 from $1,650 for the company's shares.

Amazon is one of the best-performing large-cap stocks in the market. Its shares rallied 30 percent this year through Thursday versus the S&P 500's roughly flat return.
 

DvlDog4WVU

All-Conference
Feb 2, 2008
47,238
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I’m not sure he’s that great of a leader
Apparently you guys use different definitions. And you changed the word I specifically used. I said “effective”, I did not say good, nor did I say inspirational and wouldn’t even hint at him being motivational.

He is effective.
 

Boomboom521

Redshirt
Mar 14, 2014
20,115
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0
Apparently you guys use different definitions. And you changed the word I specifically used. I said “effective”, I did not say good, nor did I say inspirational and wouldn’t even hint at him being motivational.

He is effective.
Sorry. Maybe so.
 

WVUCOOPER

Redshirt
Dec 10, 2002
55,556
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CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday threw down the gauntlet on Amazon, saying the e-commerce and cloud computing giant's latest fiscal quarter is the best he's ever seen and a "new order."

Cramer said he didn't and won't qualify that statement.

"This was the best quarter I've ever seen of a company," he said on "Squawk on the Street."


"When you do $2 better ... do you not call that the best quarter ever," Cramer asked, rhetorically, referring to Amazon's first-quarter profit of $3.27 per share versus estimates of $1.26. The results were reported Thursday after the closing bell on Wall Street. Overall revenue, which includes Whole Foods' numbers, and revenue from Amazon Web Services also exceeded what analysts had expected.

To doubters of his bold statement, Cramer said, "What are you looking for, incrementalism? This wasn't incrementalism. This is a new order."

Amazon shares jumped in early trading Friday, briefly rising above its all-time high of $1,617.54.

Analysts were quick to gush over Amazon's prospects.

The most bullish, Macquarie's Ben Schachter, raised his 12-month price target on Amazon by 20 percent to $2,100, a level that would put the stock over $1 trillion in market value.

Cramer said, "The reason it's not at a trillion is that people aren't willing to pay $300 more than they should. But they could."

"It's going to a trillion dollars," Cramer predicted.