Amazon.com (AMZN) delivered strong Q3 results, led by accelerating growth and profitability in Amazon Web Services (AWS), driving the stock to new highs. AWS revenue grew 20% year-over-year, with margin expansion to 34.5%, reaffirming its dominance and efficiency in the cloud infrastructure market. AMZN trades at a discount to peers on a forward P/S basis, offering 21% to 52% upside potential based on fair value estimates of $296–$370 per share.
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Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) has lost its legal challenge against its designation as a “Very Large Online Platform” (VLOP) under the European Union's Digital Services Act (DSA). The ruling, published on Wednesday, confirms that Amazon must comply with the strictest obligations under the DSA, which came into force in 2023.
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AMZN remains a great Buy despite the recent break out, thanks to the outsized AWS prospects during the multi-year cloud super cycle as observed in the growing Trainium monetization. This is on top of the expanding AWS multi-year backlog and profit margins, as more of its data center capacity comes online and a further doubling expected by 2027. AMZN's advertising prospects appear extremely promising during the secular CTV growth, as it penetrates 43.1% of the streaming market as of September 2025.
Amazon stock has decreased by approximately 10.7% over the last week, driven by concerns regarding decelerating AWS growth, increased competition in the cloud sector, and renewed worries about the “AI bubble.” Naturally, you might be asking: Is this a temporary setback, or does it indicate more serious issues?
Shares of Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) lost 10.98% over the past five trading sessions after gaining 0.50% the five prior.
Amazon shares have dipped amid a broad market selloff driven almost entirely by sentiment rather than fundamental developments. Worries about overbuild and higher capex create a generational buying opportunity, reminiscent of 2022. AMZN's Q3 results show accelerating AWS growth, record margins, and strong high-margin revenue lines, signaling an inflection point.
Some of the firms in the Magnificent 7 are starting to look a bit less magnificent.
3 dividend stocks with attractive dividend yields, high-quality business models and management teams, and very strong growth potential have pulled back lately. I look at the risks that have prompted the market to beat them down aggressively. I also detail why I think the risks are overblown, and these stocks are compelling buys on the dip.
For a stock that hit a fresh all-time high as recently as the start of November, it may come as a surprise that there's a bearish argument at all calling for a sell-off.
Investors are starting to worry about too much AI-related debt issuance