April 29, 2026

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Amazon Q1 earnings crush estimates across the board

Amazon (AMZN) is in the spotlight during extended trading hours after the tech giant delivered a massive “double beat” in Q1 results – powered by an explosion in AI-driven cloud demand and a high-margin advertising surge.

Investors are zeroing in on the firm’s aggressive growth trajectory and a forward-looking revenue guide that suggests the retail and cloud behemoth is only accelerating.

The headline numbers were nothing short of “blowout”. AMZN reported earnings per share (EPS) of $2.78, nearly doubling the $1.63 analysts had projected.

This also represents a meaningful leap from $0.98 reported in the same quarter last year.

On the top line, revenue hit $181.52 billion, comfortably clearing the $177.30 billion estimate and marking a significant increase over the $143.3 billion generated in Q1 2025.

Relative to its recent low, Amazon stock is currently up some 33%.

AWS growth suggests capex not a concern

A primary concern for Big Tech investors this year has been the skyrocketing cost of building the “AI backbone,” but Amazon’s Q1 results suggest these investments are already paying dividends.

AMZN confirmed its 2026 capital expenditures (capex) are set to reach a record $200 billion this year, largely directed toward data centers and proprietary silicon like the Trainium3 chip.

While a $200 billion price tag might typically spook the market, the efficiency within the Amazon Web Services (AWS) segment is silencing the bears.

AWS revenue grew to $37.59 billion, beating estimates of $36.64 billion and showing its fastest growth in years.

This suggests that for every dollar Amazon spends on infrastructure, the market is seeing a direct, high-margin return from enterprise customers migrating AI workloads to the cloud.

Shareholder concern over “overspending” is being replaced by the realization that AMZN stock is effectively building a wide, technological moat that rivals will find difficult to replicate.

Amazon benefits from high-margin ad revenue

Beyond cloud, Amazon’s advertising business has emerged as a high-margin powerhouse, reporting $17.24 billion in revenue, surpassing the $16.87 billion forecasted by Wall Street.

This business is particularly attractive to investors because its margins are significantly higher than those of the traditional retail shop, essentially acting as “pure profit” that helps subsidize the firm’s massive logistics and R&D costs.

The integration of ad tiers within Prime Video and the use of generative AI to help sellers create more effective campaigns have turned Amazon into the third-largest digital ad platform globally.

Looking ahead, management’s guidance remains incredibly bullish; Amazon.com Inc expects Q2 sales between $194 billion and $199 billion, well above the $188.9 billion analysts were looking for.

This suggests that the “flywheel” effect – where more shoppers lead to more data, which leads to more effective ads – is spinning faster than ever, and that’s ever-so bullish for Amazon shares.

Is Amazon worth buying after Q1 earnings?

The bull case for AMZN shares is no longer just about selling books or groceries; it is about the total dominance of the digital ecosystem.

From a valuation standpoint, Amazon’s forward P/E ratio is becoming increasingly attractive as earnings growth (up over 180% year-over-year) continues to outpace share price appreciation.

Recent analyst notes from firms like JPMorgan highlight that Amazon is entering a “golden era of margin expansion” as automation and robotics in fulfillment centers lower the “cost to serve” while AI fuels the next leg of AWS growth.

With a cash-rich balance sheet and the recent strategic partnership with AI-startup Anthropic further solidifying its position, Amazon is capturing the entire AI stack – from the chips (Trainium) to the platform (Bedrock) to the consumer-facing apps.

For long-term investors, the Q1 report confirms that Amazon is not just a participant in the AI revolution; it is the landlord.

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