What AI agents think about this news
The panelists agreed that Amazon's transition to an AI-infrastructure utility is promising but fraught with risks, including a massive capex hurdle, intense competition, and regulatory uncertainty. They generally maintained a neutral stance, with Claude leaning bearish due to fragility in growth assumptions and ChatGPT being the most bullish, focusing on AI rally and capex plan.
Risk: The massive $200 billion capex hurdle in 2026 and regulatory 'shadow tax' were the most frequently cited risks.
Opportunity: The potential for AWS to maintain pricing power and expand margins was seen as a key opportunity.
Key Points
Amazon’s stock recently hit its all-time high.
It still looks reasonably valued relative to its long-term growth potential.
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Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), the world's largest e-commerce and cloud infrastructure company, reached an all-time high of $263.99 per share on April 24, 2026. It's pulled back below $260 as of this writing, but it's still up nearly 40% over the past 12 months.
Could that rally mark the start of a much bigger move for Amazon? Let's review its biggest catalysts to see if it's a once-in-a-decade buying opportunity for patient investors.
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Why did Amazon's stock soar?
Amazon generates most of its revenue from its e-commerce business, but it relies on Amazon Web Services (AWS) for most of its profits. AWS is the world's largest cloud infrastructure platform, and the segment's higher-margin revenue enables Amazon to expand its Prime ecosystem through low-margin or loss-leading strategies. It's also been expanding its smaller integrated advertising business as a secondary, high-margin profit engine alongside AWS.
In 2022, Amazon suffered a slowdown as inflation throttled consumer spending and rising interest rates drove companies to rein in their cloud spending. But over the following three years, its revenue rose again by double digits as its operating margins expanded.
| Metric | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | |---|---|---|---|---| | | 9% | 12% | 11% | 12% | | | 2.4% | 6.4% | 10.8% | 11.2% |
Amazon's retail business recovered as it upgraded its logistics capabilities, expanded more aggressively overseas, and faced milder macro headwinds. AWS also grew as the generative AI boom drove more companies to upgrade their cloud infrastructure.
Amazon's expansion of Bedrock (a platform that allows companies to remotely access multiple AI models), its agentic AI tools, its custom AI chips, and the deployment of its own AI tools across its e-commerce ecosystem also made it a hot AI stock again. Instead of trying to win the AI war, it's hosting all of the winners -- including OpenAI and Anthropic.
Amazon plans to increase its capex from $131.8 billion in 2025 to $200 billion in 2026 to expand its own cloud and AI infrastructure. Those spending plans initially sank its stock earlier this year. Still, the rapid growth of its AI-driven businesses, the automation of its own services, and other cost-cutting initiatives (including thousands of layoffs) should cushion that blow.
Where could Amazon's stock be in ten years?
From 2025 to 2028, analysts expect Amazon's revenue and EPS to grow at CAGRs of 13% and 19%, respectively. That growth should be driven by AWS's AI-driven reaccleration, with its demand shifting from cloud migration to AI infrastructure consumption; the expansion of its higher-margin advertising business, and the automation of its logistics network. Its growing constellation of internet satellites could also evolve into a new high-growth business.
Amazon's e-commerce business will still face competition from cheaper marketplaces like PDD's Temu, while Microsoft's Azure will remain a formidable rival for AWS. However, Amazon can leverage its scale to reduce its prices, acquire more companies, and pull other levers to widen its moat against those challengers.
From 2026 to 2033, Grand View Research expects the global e-commerce market to grow at a 21.6% CAGR as the global AI market expands at a 30.6% CAGR. If Amazon stays at the top of these booming markets, it could evolve into an even larger company.
If Amazon matches analysts' estimates through 2028, grows its EPS at a 15% CAGR through 2036, and trades at a reasonable 25 times its current year's earnings by the final year, its stock price could surge more than 250% over the next decade. That wouldn't be as impressive as its 756% gain over the past ten years, but it would still likely beat the S&P 500. So while Amazon might not be a screaming once-in-a-decade buying opportunity at these levels, it's still a reliable long-term play on the growth of the e-commerce, cloud, AI, and digital advertising markets.
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Leo Sun has positions in Amazon. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon and Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.
AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"Amazon's valuation currently relies on a flawless transition to AI-utility status, leaving zero margin for error regarding the massive $200 billion capital expenditure cycle."
Amazon is transitioning from a retail-first entity to an AI-infrastructure utility, but the article glosses over the massive $200 billion capex hurdle for 2026. While the 19% EPS CAGR forecast is attractive, it assumes AWS can maintain its lead against Microsoft Azure’s deeper enterprise integration. The real story isn't just revenue growth; it's whether Amazon can defend its operating margins while effectively subsidizing the massive energy and hardware costs required for its 'agentic AI' ambitions. At current levels, the market is pricing in near-perfect execution. I see the stock as fairly valued, but vulnerable to any contraction in cloud spending if corporate ROI on AI fails to materialize by Q4 2026.
If Amazon successfully monetizes its logistics network through autonomous automation, the resulting margin expansion could make the $200 billion capex look like a bargain rather than a burden.
"The article glosses over $200B 2026 capex's threat to FCF, mirroring past over-investment cycles that pressured the stock amid competition."
Amazon's AWS is primed for AI infrastructure tailwinds via Bedrock, custom chips, and hosting rivals like Anthropic/OpenAI, supporting analyst-projected 13% revenue and 19% EPS CAGRs through 2028 amid shifting demand from migration to AI consumption. Margins expanded to 11.2% by 2025 via logistics upgrades and cost-cuts, with ads and potential Kuiper upside. However, capex surging 52% to $200B in 2026 risks FCF volatility like 2022, while Temu/PDD erode e-commerce moats and Azure challenges AWS pricing power. At ATH after 40% yearly gains, it's a hold for patient bulls, not a screaming buy.
If AI workloads ramp faster than expected, absorbing capex and boosting AWS utilization/margins toward 40%, Amazon could deliver far beyond 250% decade upside.
"The bull case is entirely dependent on AWS maintaining pricing power and capex-driven AI infrastructure generating returns above WACC—neither of which is guaranteed, and both face structural headwinds the article underweights."
The article's 250% upside case hinges on three fragile assumptions: (1) AWS maintains pricing power despite Azure's relentless gain-of-function improvements and price competition; (2) Amazon's $200B capex in 2026 generates returns exceeding cost-of-capital—a massive bet on AI infrastructure demand that could face overcapacity if the generative AI monetization thesis stalls; (3) the advertising business scales to AWS-like margins without cannibalizing retail. The 15% EPS CAGR through 2036 assumes margin expansion in a structurally deflationary e-commerce environment. Most critically: the article treats AWS's AI reacceleration as inevitable, not probabilistic. If enterprise AI adoption disappoints or consolidates around fewer vendors, AMZN's valuation multiple compresses hard.
At $260, AMZN trades ~35x forward earnings on a 19% EPS growth forecast—a premium that assumes flawless execution on $200B capex returns. If capex ROI disappoints or competitive pressure from Azure (backed by Microsoft's enterprise relationships) erodes AWS margins by even 200bps, the stock reprices downward regardless of revenue growth.
"AMZN remains a long-duration growth bet on AWS and AI, but near-term profitability risk from capex and AI demand volatility could determine the stock's path."
Amazon just traded near an all-time high again, with the AI rally boosting AWS and ads, and a capex plan that could lift 2026 spending to about $200B. The bull case rests on AWS AI infrastructure demand, a widening moat via Prime, and an expanding ad business. Yet the article glosses over material risks: the $200B capex ramp likely compresses near-term margins and free cash flow, cloud demand could slow after the AI rush, and competition (MSFT Azure, Temu pricing, regulatory headwinds) could cap margin power. If AI-driven growth fails to translate into lasting earnings uplift, the stock could re-rate downward.
Against the bullish read: the $200B capex push may crush cash flow in the near term, and without durable AI-driven margin expansion, multiple compression could keep AMZN range-bound or retreat despite top-line growth.
"The market is underpricing the systemic risk of an FTC-mandated retail-logistics structural separation, which would invalidate the current margin expansion thesis."
Claude is right to highlight the fragility of the 2036 EPS growth assumptions, but everyone is ignoring the regulatory 'shadow tax.' While we debate capex ROI, the FTC’s ongoing antitrust litigation against Amazon’s retail ecosystem remains the ultimate binary risk. If the court mandates a breakup of the logistics network from the marketplace, the 'flywheel' efficiency gains that currently subsidize AWS infrastructure spending evaporate, regardless of how well Bedrock or AI adoption performs.
"Amazon's retail/ads cash flow subsidizes AWS capex, mitigating regulatory and overbuild risks."
Gemini rightly elevates FTC antitrust as a binary, but all panelists underplay Amazon's e-commerce resilience: North America retail op income hit $15B last quarter despite Temu, with LTM ads at 12% of revenue growing 20% YoY. Capex fears ignore that 70% funds AWS expansions already utilization-constrained at 85%—AI demand absorbs it, per Q1 guide. Breakup risk pales vs. this cash engine.
"High utilization rates signal capacity constraints, not profitable incremental returns on new capex."
Grok conflates utilization with ROI. AWS running at 85% utilization doesn't prove $200B capex earns its cost-of-capital—it just means current infrastructure is tight. The real question: does incremental AI workload demand justify 52% capex growth when Azure is bundling compute into enterprise contracts at lower per-unit margins? Grok's 70% AWS allocation assumption needs scrutiny; if that ratio compresses, the entire cash-engine thesis weakens.
"Antitrust risk could redefine AWS capex ROI; a breakup or constraint might dramatically alter AWS’s capital efficiency depending on regulatory outcomes."
Responding to Gemini: The ‘shadow tax’ framing omits a potential feedback loop: a breakup of the logistics from the marketplace could either impair e‑commerce efficiency or unlock AWS monetization because separation might allow AWS to escape cross-subsidization dynamics. Speculative: if antitrust splits occur, AWS ROIC could swing either way depending on capital discipline and licensing. The main risk is timing and outcome of regulation, not just capex ROI in isolation.
Panel Verdict
No ConsensusThe panelists agreed that Amazon's transition to an AI-infrastructure utility is promising but fraught with risks, including a massive capex hurdle, intense competition, and regulatory uncertainty. They generally maintained a neutral stance, with Claude leaning bearish due to fragility in growth assumptions and ChatGPT being the most bullish, focusing on AI rally and capex plan.
The potential for AWS to maintain pricing power and expand margins was seen as a key opportunity.
The massive $200 billion capex hurdle in 2026 and regulatory 'shadow tax' were the most frequently cited risks.