Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

Amazon Cloud Unit Helps It Stay Profitable While Investing

Amazon's second-quarter earnings that topped analysts’ estimates, showing investors it can be consistently profitable.
Source: Shutterstock
By
  • Bloomberg

SEATTLE, United States — Amazon.com Inc. is showing investors it can be consistently profitable while making big investments to challenge competitors in the US and expand around the globe.

The Seattle-based company reported second-quarter earnings that topped analysts’ estimates, while spending on quicker delivery to keep ahead of Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and other brick-and-mortar retailers, expanding its entertainment offerings to challenge video-streaming rival Netflix Inc. and pouring money into India to take on e-commerce competitor Flipkart Ltd.

It’s a new chapter for Amazon, which has previously entered money-losing cycles with big investments in pursuit of growth. The company Thursday reported its fifth-straight profitable quarter while operating expenses rose 28 percent to $29.1 billion.

“They are really putting the narrative that this company can’t be profitable to rest,” said RJ Hottovy, an equity analyst at Morningstar Inc.

ADVERTISEMENT

Amazon Web Services, the company’s fast-growing and profitable cloud-computing division, provides a lot of wiggle room in other areas of the business. The unit delivered operating income of $718 million — 56 percent of Amazon’s total — though it accounted for only 9.5 percent of revenue.

The extra cushion enables Amazon to increase spending elsewhere without losing money. The company will have opened 21 new fulfilment centers this year by the end of the third quarter. That is more than double the 10 it opened in the first nine months of 2015, Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky said.

Strong demand during last year’s holiday season drove up costs for Amazon as its delivery operations were stretched to the max. The company hopes to head off a repeat this year by building additional capacity, which could improve profit margins in the critical fourth quarter.

More on Amazon’s earnings report

Amazon also will double spending on digital content in the second half of the year compared with 2015, Olsavsky said. The spending will help Amazon increase its original video content, encouraging more customers to sign up for the $99 annual Prime membership to get the company’s entertainment programming and further distinguishing the video-streaming service from its competitors.

And it continues to invest in India, the world’s second-most populous country. Amazon has pledged to spend $5 billion in the country and launched its Prime program there earlier this month with an offer of free one- and two-day shipping to stand out from Flipkart.

“We’re very encouraged by what we’ve seen in India,” Olsavsky said on a call with analysts.

By Spencer Soper; editors: Jillian Ward, Andrew Pollack and Alistair Barr.

© 2026 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Financial Markets
A financial lens on the fast-changing fashion sector, including markets, investors and deals.

L Catterton: Finding Value in a Tough Market

Nikhil Thukral, managing partner at the LVMH-affiliated private equity fund, talks about the ingredients of winning companies, the dynamics challenging fashion's incumbents and how economic shifts are shaping investor strategies in the BoF-McKinsey State of Fashion 2025.


The Best of BoF 2023: Diversity’s Litmus Test

In 2020, like many companies, the $50 billion yoga apparel brand created a new department to improve internal diversity and inclusion, and to create a more equitable playing field for minorities. In interviews with BoF, 14 current and former employees said things only got worse.


The Year Ahead: The Future of Fashion Deal-Making

For fashion’s private market investors, deal-making may provide less-than-ideal returns and raise questions about the long-term value creation opportunities across parts of the fashion industry, reports The State of Fashion 2024.


view more
Latest News & Analysis
Unrivalled, world class journalism across fashion, luxury and beauty industries.

Paris Day Five: Identities New and Old

From Loewe to Yohji Yamamoto, the fifth day of Paris fashion week featured recently installed designers rolling out fresh identities and unbeatable masters being themselves.


When War and Luxury Collide

Escalating conflict in the Middle East is exposing how quickly geopolitics can disrupt even luxury’s most carefully cultivated retail hubs.


Nike’s Latest SEC Filing Revives Converse Sale Speculation

In a document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company’s management has approved a plan for organisational changes expected to cost the brand nearly $300 million. One analyst posited the target could be its struggling subsidiary.


VIEW MORE
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON