*By Chloe Aiello* Amazon whipsawed after the bell, first surging and then erasing its earlier gains, after beating Wall Street expectations on its top and bottom lines, but reporting weak outlook. Bolstered by a strong holiday season, Amazon ($AMZN) beat the Street's estimates for the first time in two quarters. Its previous misses invited suspicion the e-commerce giant’s growth was slowing even as competition heats up with rivals like Walmart domestically and Alibaba abroad. Amazon reported earnings per share of $6.04 on revenue of $72.4 billion, beating the $5.68 EPS on $71.87 billion in revenue analysts were expecting, according to Thomson Reuters. Overall revenue climbed close to 20 percent year-over-year. Despite its top and bottom lines beats, its revenue growth has actually decelerated. Last year, its year-over-year revenue growth rate was almost twice the rate Amazon reported this quarter. And it looks like Amazon anticipates that trend will continue next quarter. Next quarter, Amazon said it anticipates net sales to fall between $56 billion and $60 billion ー an increase of between 10 to 18 percent year-over-year. Revenue in the first quarter is typically lower than holiday revenue, but the first quarter of 2018 saw a growth rate of 43 percent year-over-year. "Very good beat for 2018, but in the record-breaking cold weather, Amazon should have had a much bigger beat, much stronger guidance. And guidance is disappointing," Burt Flickinger, a retail expert from Strategic Research Group, told Cheddar. Amazon has in recent years seen wider margin businesses like cloud, advertising, and its marketplace flourish, [CNBC reported](https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/31/amazon-earnings-q4-2018.html). But those businesses tend to have lower sales, meaning less overall revenue. Amazon reported $7.43 billion in revenue for its cloud services sector, Amazon Web Services ー a jump of 45 percent since last year, when it reported $5.11 billion in revenue. Growth in AWS is key, especially in light of concerns over slowed growth in the cloud industry. Uncertainty about Microsoft’s Azure [dragged on its earnings on Wednesday](https://cheddar.com/videos/microsoft-tumbles-after-earnings-report-on-cloud-business-concerns), following comments from chipmakers and equipment suppliers that business from cloud customers had slowed amid uncertain global economic conditions. Amazon also said sales from advertising services and other related services came in at $3.39 billion ー almost doubling last year's revenue. "It wasn't more than seven, eight years ago that AWS was this new kind of business emerging in Amazon. Advertising could be the next flywheel that really starts to make Amazon go to back to that high of $2 000 a share," said Christian Magoon, CEO of Amplify ETFs.

Share:
More In Business
Apple Watch Alerts Woman to Blood Clot
A 29-year-old Cincinnati woman was awakened by her Apple Watch, which alerted her about an elevated heart rate, prompting her to head to a doctor who notified her of a blood clot.
Keeping Employees Safe in Extreme Heat
UPS recently announced it would equip delivery trucks with air conditioning. Dr. Douglas Casa, CEO of Korey Stringer Institute at the University of Connecticut, spoke with Cheddar News on the dangers of heat stroke and how workers can keep themselves safe from extreme weather.
Stretching Your Dollar: How to Make Home EV Charging Affordable
The push for clean energy is igniting an interest in electric vehicles but charging EVs continues to be a concern for consumers looking to save. Brian Moody, executive editor with Autotrader, joined Cheddar News to discuss how people can make home-charging more affordable.
Load More