Who Says Amazon's Margins Are Rising?
Here's what investors can expect to hear during Amazon's (AMZN) 2nd quarter conference call next week:
- Low prices caused margins to be low.
- Q&A will have 793 occurrences of "you know" from Szkutak.
- Increased product mix caused margins to be low.
- No comment about tax litigation.
- Low prices caused margins to be low.
- Very secretive about Kindle unit sales but listeners are told it's a huge success.
- Goal is to satisfy customers as a "customer-centric firm".
- Low prices caused margins to be low.
- Bezos wakes-up just prior to last question.
- Amazon Prime caused margins to be low.
Using Amazon's own midpoint guidance, we should expect second quarter operating margins to come in around 3.52%. This means Amazon's margins are eroding even further.
The firm focuses all of its energy on increasing the top line -- with free shipping offers and new product offerings such as electronics, groceries, music and now office supplies (all low margin goods). The concept of "same-store-sales" doesn't apply to e-tailers.
Bulls like to say Amazon's margins are improving too -- but that was only because 2006 performance was so ugly. Long term, the margins are falling.


Disclosure: Author holds a short position in AMZN
Related Articles
|
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 6 comments:
- Tom B
- 1697 Comments
Jul 14 09:14 AMTax litigation????
- jimmy46
- 178 Comments
Jul 14 02:13 PMtax lit?
NY state is making amzn pay sales tax now, other states are thinking about it. this kills internet sales.
AMZN is ok for quality, but the "shops" are cr*p.
- netmargin15
- 7 Comments
Jul 15 02:17 AMIt should be noted that since hitting bottom in Q4 2006, Amazon's trailing-twelve-month operating margin has risen steadily from 3.64% to 4.44%.
> Using Amazon's own midpoint guidance, we should expect second quarter operating margins to come in around 3.52%.
Amazon also consistently beats the midpoint. In fact, since Q4 2006, Amazon's operating profit has averaged within 2-3% of the highpoint of their guidance.
- turb0kat
- 5 Comments
Jul 16 03:06 AM- LouieJunior
- 16 Comments
My Website
Jul 19 09:18 AM> They always beat on revenues -- seldom on operating income.
> Hence the expectation of lower margins.
turb0kat
> Okay, give 'em a premium for the revenue growth, but not a high-tech multiple on top of that! Google has similar revenue growth and has 30% operating margins -- its multiple is 33 (ttm). Amazon is a low-margin retailer with multiple of 58 (ttm).
> We'll see if it's a $30 Billion company at summers end. Guessing not...
- netmargin15
- 7 Comments
Jul 20 04:06 PMObviously, you didn't actually look at Amazon's results relative to their guidance for operating income in coming up with your conclusion. I guess it's easier to just make up facts as opposed to looking it up.
Q1 2008 - guidance ($155m-$200m) vs. actual ($198m)
Q4 2007 - guidance ($221m-$291m) vs. actual ($271m)
Q3 2007 - guidance ($75m-$110m) vs. actual ($123m)
Q2 2007 - guidance ($65m-$105m) vs. actual ($116m)
Q1 2007 - guidance ($82m-$122m) vs. actual ($145m)
More by Louie Junior
Articles on related themes
Short Ideas
e-Commerce
e-Finance
Internet Advertising