Outrageous Predictions
Révolution Verte en Suisse : un projet de CHF 30 milliards d’ici 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment Strategist
Amazon needs AWS growth to feel more “AI-powered”, not just stable.
Retail margins are improving, but fierce competition can turn discounts into thinner profits.
Capital spending versus free cash flow is the report card investors focus on.
Amazon reports fourth-quarter 2025 results on 5 February 2026, with the conference call at 23:00 Central European time. This matters because Amazon sits in a rare spot: it is both a consumer business and a cloud infrastructure business, at a time when investors obsess over artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure.
The odd part is the share price story. While parts of big tech have looked like they have been fitted with rocket boosters, Amazon has been the sturdy workhorse. The shares are essentially flat over the past year, as investors weigh real progress against a simple worry: the AI bill arrives now, while the payoff feels slower.
That is why this quarter is not about winning the AI popularity contest. It is about winning the “show me the receipts” contest. In other words, can Amazon turn heavy spending into clearer AWS momentum and stronger free cash flow, not just more ambition?
AWS is the profit engine, and it needs to purrAmazon Web Services (AWS) is Amazon’s cloud unit, it rents out computing power and storage to companies, so they do not need to build their own data centres. It is also the profit engine that tends to fund everything else.
The near-term question is not whether AWS grows. It is whether growth looks like it is getting pulled forward by AI demand, as rivals talk up new workloads. Analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect AWS growth to edge higher versus the prior quarter, but expectations are not sky-high. That is both a risk and a relief.
What to watch in the update is the mix of three things.
First, “capacity”. If AWS says it cannot meet demand fast enough, that can sound negative, but it also confirms demand is real. If AWS does not mention constraints, investors may ask whether demand is softer than peers implied.
Second, AI services adoption. The simple point is: are customers renting more computing because they run AI models, or are they still experimenting? In earnings calls, you often hear the difference in tone. “Pilots” and “proofs of concept” sound like learning. “Production workloads” sounds like habit.
Third, profitability inside AWS. A cloud business can grow nicely and still disappoint if costs rise faster, especially when data-centre depreciation increases. You do not need a spreadsheet to follow it. Listen for whether management talks about efficiency and utilisation, or mostly about opportunity and long-term potential.
Retail is less glamorous, but it can quietly lift the whole storyAmazon’s retail business is where most people meet the company. It is also where the market has started to give Amazon more credit again, because margins have improved versus the “growth at any cost” years.
There are two simple drivers here.
One is logistics efficiency. When Amazon delivers more packages through its own network, with better routing and fewer “half-empty van” miles, each order becomes cheaper to fulfil. That tends to show up in operating income, even if revenue growth looks ordinary.
The other is advertising. Amazon’s ads sit inside the shopping journey, which makes them unusually practical: a brand pays to be seen when a customer already wants to buy something. Advertising is typically higher margin than shipping a box, so steady ad growth can act like a profit booster in the background.
The catch is competition, which is not taking a holiday. In e-commerce, rivals fight with price, delivery speed, and convenience. If Amazon chooses to defend market share with sharper pricing or faster delivery promises, it can compress margins again.
So the retail question for this quarter is not “did you sell more?”. It is “did you sell more without spending all the profit on getting it to the doorstep?”.
Capital expenditure (capex) is money spent on long-lived assets, like data centres and servers. Free cash flow (FCF) is the cash left after a company pays its operating costs and invests in the business. Investors care about FCF because it is what ultimately funds buybacks, debt reduction, and future flexibility.
Amazon’s capex is where the market’s mood can flip fast. Big spending can be a sign of confidence, especially if the company sees demand and wants to build capacity. But it also “eats” FCF today, and that can make the stock feel stuck, even if profits rise.
This quarter, the market is especially sensitive to two things.
One is the path of spending into 2026. If Amazon signals that capex stays elevated or rises, investors will want a clearer explanation of payback timing. Not a fantasy. A framework.
The second is whether AI demand is translating into visible AWS momentum. If spending rises but AWS growth feels only steady, the market can read that as a widening gap between cost and payoff. That is the core worry behind your setup, and it is why Amazon’s report may matter more than its headline revenue number.
The first risk is an “expectations gap” inside AWS. If AWS growth merely matches steady expectations, the stock can still wobble if investors hoped for a clear acceleration. The early warning sign is management leaning heavily on long-term AI opportunity without giving near-term indicators of improving demand or capacity.
The second risk is that capex guidance spooks the market. Even if the strategy is sensible, a sharp rise in expected spending can pressure sentiment, because it pushes the FCF payoff further out. The early warning sign is higher spending paired with cautious language on near-term margins.
The third risk sits in retail execution. Competition can force faster delivery and lower prices, which are great for customers but not always great for profit. The early warning sign is rising fulfilment costs or softer operating income commentary, even when sales hold up.
Investor playbook
If AWS growth improves and capex looks controlled, the market narrative can shift from “cost” to “capacity building”.
If capex rises again, watch whether management ties it to signed demand, not just ambition.
If retail margins hold while delivery speeds improve, it signals logistics efficiency is compounding.
If the call focuses on “early days” language, track whether that changes next quarter into “production” language.
Amazon’s earnings are not a fireworks show. They are a receipt check. The company can look “boring” in the short run because it builds expensive infrastructure before it collects the full rent. That is the trade-off: capex hurts free cash flow today, while AWS and retail efficiency aim to pay it back tomorrow.
This quarter matters because it tells you whether the gap is narrowing. If AWS shows a clearer AI lift and retail keeps its margin discipline, Amazon stops looking like a stock that waits for its moment. It starts looking like a business that manufactures its moment. Quietly, and on schedule.
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