Photo Credit: Christian Wiediger
Disclosure: The author holds a long position in Amazon (AMZN) stock.
Amazon (AMZN) stock fell nearly 4% in after-hours trading Thursday, despite beating earnings expectations. But the sell-off wasn’t about Amazon’s business. It was about the bigger picture.
Amazon’s finance team issued cautionary guidance factoring in broader economic risk—from trade uncertainty to potential workforce disruption due to AI. This isn’t a story of underperformance. It’s a story of transparency. While many investors are chasing the AI boom, Amazon chose to model what happens if the U.S. economy slows. And the market wasn’t ready to hear it.
Amazon’s core retail business, including Amazon.com, depends on consumer spending. And with ongoing tariff battles, trade renegotiations, and concerns about AI’s long-term impact on employment, Amazon is simply acknowledging the possibility of turbulence ahead.
But there’s still a bullish case. Amazon continues to innovate in its high-revenue business lines in ways that deliver more cashflow. Take Amazon Ads: as Carly Zipp, Amazon Ads’ Global Director of Brand Marketing, explained in a recent interview (watch here), Amazon’s edge is its deep understanding of what you’re shopping for. Ads aren’t just targeted—they’re helpful, even enjoyable. You’re not watching a pizza ad you’ll skip. You’re learning about the shoes you nearly bought yesterday.
Another example is Amazon AWS Bedrock AI services. Amazon Bedrock offers businesses a capital-light alternative to expensive AI infrastructure, giving Amazon a strong foothold in the AI race, along with OpenAI and Microsoft Azure who compete to offer similar low-cost AI entry points. These are the engines of long-term growth.
If the economy holds steady, Amazon stock has serious upside. But as Amazon made clear—the risk isn’t them. It’s everything else.

