Thursday, October 23, 2014

Amazon's acquisitions and experiments are erasing its profits


In case you didn't know, here's the crazy thing about Amazon: it isn't really known for turning a profit. Just think about that for a second. The company that wants to you sell everything, get it to you by any means necessary and serves as the backbone for a considerable chunk of the internet doesn't usually make money at the end of the day. And even with that financial truth entered into the record, people -- from Wall Street types to armchair prognosticators -- cheer whenever Amazon avoids losing as much money in a quarter as they expect it to. Today is not one of those days.


Amazon's Q3 results dropped not too long ago, and it packs some big number -- the Everything Store raked in $20.58 billion in revenue , but also reported a net loss of $437 million (which is nearly 10 times as big a loss as what it reported in Q3 2013). Shareholders, as patient as they can be, are really not pleased -- with both numbers worse than they expected, Amazon's stock price is down nearly 10 percent in after-hours trading. Amazon's business model is the epitome of spending money to make money, except what operating profits they do post are pretty meager and big losses like today's aren't rare. In fairness, this quarter has been a really busy one for the folks in Seattle. After all, Amazon snapped up Twitch for a billion dollars, expanded its same-day delivery service in six cities across the United States, and launched a phone that no one actually seems to want (if you're reading, Bezos, we'd like still like hard sales numbers for that thing). The question is, how much longer can Amazon afford to spend and spend and acquire and expand and create before shareholders -- the people who back the company with their own money -- decide that enough is enough?


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Source: Amazon


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