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revenue
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Revenue
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https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jan/28/
tesla-q4-earnings-estimates-elon-musk
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report
an 18 percent rise in quarterly revenue
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first-quarter profit and revenue
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https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/29/
technology/29soft.html
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Economy > Companies > Results > Revenues
Amazon
Delivers on Revenue
but Not on Profit
July 26,
2012
The New York Times
By DAVID STREITFELD
SAN
FRANCISCO — Leaping revenue, little profit.
That is the long-established Amazon story, and those who expected to hear it
again Thursday were not disappointed.
The company reported sales of $12.8 billion, up 29 percent, in the second
quarter while it eked out net income of $7 million, or a penny a share.
Those results essentially matched expectations. Analysts had estimated the
Seattle-based retailer would earn 2 cents a share, down from 41 cents a share in
the second quarter of 2011.
In what is becoming a routine warning, Amazon said that profit in the current
quarter would remain elusive. Revenue might grow as much as 31 percent, the
company said, but it was expecting a loss. Losses at Amazon were routine in its
early years but in recent years it has made a profit, albeit a small one.
This would be devastating news from some Internet companies. But Amazon bulls
were unfazed, saying the retailer was investing, as always, in the future.
“If they keep this up, there’s a good possibility that you’re looking at
shopping malls going the way of the record store and the bookstore and the video
rental store,” said Jason Moser, who covers Amazon for the Motley Fool
investment site.
Amazon shares Thursday were up $3 to $220 during regular trading. The stock is
trading only about 10 percent below its record high, with a stratospheric
price-to-earnings ratio of about 170. In after-hours trading, shares continued
rising.
Since its founding in 1994, Amazon has been focused on broadening its product
and customer bases, not pumping up its profit margins. And the growth has been
tremendous — it is now one of the country’s largest retailers. Even in North
America, its most established market, it has been growing consistently more than
twice as fast as the e-commerce market as a whole, a Forrester Research report
released Thursday noted.
Amazon is building 18 new fulfillment centers around the world this year. In the
United States, many of them are close to major cities, including New York City,
San Francisco and Los Angeles. In a conference call with analysts, Thomas J.
Szkutak, Amazon’s chief financial officer, said, “We’re investing certainly for
the long term.”
In the past, Amazon declined to build warehouses in states where it had many
customers, because it would then have to collect sales taxes from them. Now the
promise of offering these areas even faster delivery seems to be more of an
imperative than continuing to fight the tax issue.
Amazon fans probably dream of ordering books or bagels and getting them the same
day. But Mr. Szkutak indicated this would remain a dream. “We don’t really see a
way to do same-day delivery on a broad scale economically,” he cautioned.
Six of the new warehouses are already open. Getting some of the others ready for
the all-important holiday season helps explain the predicted absence of profit
in the third quarter. The centers are a large factor in Amazon’s accelerating
head count, which is up 60 percent over the last year to 60,000 employees.
One word that was little mentioned during the call by either Mr. Szkutak or the
analysts: Kindle. Amazon’s tablet, the Kindle Fire, was introduced last fall in
an ocean of hype. New models are seen by some as overdue.
“We’re excited about the road map we have” for e-readers and e-books, Mr.
Szkutak said. He declined to say what that map was.
Amazon Delivers on Revenue but Not on Profit,
NYT,
26.7.2012,
https://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/27/
technology/amazon-delivers-on-revenue-but-not-on-profit.html
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