The market has put up a strong run this year, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq charging to fresh highs, but Amazon's (AMZN 0.75%) stock has sat on the sidelines, basically flat. That disconnect is worth paying attention to.
The FTC lawsuit against Amazon ends with one of the costliest consumer protection settlements in US history.
The FTC lawsuit ends with one of the largest consumer protection settlements in US history.
Amazon remains the dominant force in e-commerce, leveraging its ecosystem, vertical integration, and global reach for sustained growth. AMZN's strategic business model, robust fundamentals, and effective cost management drive double-digit revenue growth and healthy margins, despite inflation and tariff challenges. Valuation is attractive, with AMZN trading below historical averages on key metrics, offering upside potential, with a target price range of $274-$315.
Amazon receives a Strong Buy rating due to its relentless innovation and dominant positions in e-commerce and cloud computing. AMZN's leadership in AWS, strategic AI partnerships, and expansion into digital advertising, AR, and live sports streaming fuel future growth. Valuation remains attractive, with key profitability ratios below historical averages, despite the company's massive scale and ongoing expansion.
Amazon plans to shut all its grocery stores in Britain, after the shops without checkout registers failed to compete with online delivery demand.
If you're a fan of Amazon Fresh, the e-commerce giant's chain of cashier-less of grocery stores, 2025 is turning out to be a pretty rough year for you—and the brand.
Amazon (AMZN) is well-positioned to join the $3 trillion market cap club, driven by diverse revenue streams and wide moats. Despite AWS facing strong competition from Microsoft and Google, AMZN's growth in e-commerce, subscriptions, and automation, also support long-term value creation. Conservative projections show AMZN can achieve a $3 trillion valuation by 2026, with high-margin segments and recurring revenues fueling upside.
Amazon.com Inc. exercised "overwhelming control" over subcontracted drivers it claimed weren't its employees, U.S. labor board attorneys told a judge Monday.
Amazon goes to trial on Monday in a US government lawsuit that accuses the e-commerce giant of using tricks to enroll millions of customers in its Prime subscription service and then making it nearly impossible to cancel.
Amazon's subscription cancellation policy will face a jury trial this week. As The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported Sunday (Sept.
It's the classic deserted desert island scenario: I have to pick just one stock that I would buy today and then hold forever. I can't move the goalposts by picking an exchange-traded fund (ETF) and I'm not planning to build a portfolio around this name.