Amazon Strong Results Point Toward Boost for Cloud Business

Amazon.com Inc. Chief Executive Officer Andy Jassy gave investors much of what they wanted this earnings season: robust sales and profit growth along with a hint that the cloud division earnings machine is regaining momentum.

While third-quarter revenue at Amazon Web Services, the cloud computing unit, fell just short of projections, Jassy said the business is stabilizing. The company signed several new deals with customers that took effect this month, and demand for generative artificial intelligence is likely to boost the division well into the future, he said Thursday on a conference call after the results were released. The shares gained sharply after his comments and remained up about 5% in pre-market trading on Friday.

Amazon’s CEO has been winning over Wall Street this year with deep cost cuts and a focus on boosting profit. Under his guidance, the Seattle-based company has become increasingly reliant on services that tend to make more money than the original business of hawking goods online, including advertising, logistics services for independent merchants and renting computing power to corporations.

Cloud unit sales increased 12% to $23.1 billion, a growth rate that was “just enough to keep the goblins away,” analysts at Jefferies said in a note to clients. It was slightly higher than the previous period, marking the first quarter-to-quarter rise in AWS revenue growth in almost two years.

The business’s operating income of $6.98 billion was about $1.3 billion more than analysts expected. AWS, which generally accounts for more profit than the rest of the company combined, reported the highest operating margin since the first quarter of 2022.

On the call, Jassy acknowledged that some companies are still seeking to cut their spending on rented computing power and software, a phenomenon that has hobbled growth at AWS, along with rivals Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc. But many clients are now turning to running new projects on Amazon’s servers, Jassy said.