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Related Video How tech layoffs could affect the economyIn today's newsletter, the $13 billion Omnicom-IPG megamerger reflects a new era as Big Tech and AI upend the ad industry. OmnicomIt's already been a big week for the ad industry. For ad industry insiders, the proposed takeover reflects an ad sector under threat from Big Tech and AI , writes Business Insider's Lara O'Reilly. AdvertisementPrivate equity has been circling the ad industry, too. Industry insiders have speculated for months that WPP could be taken private — or at least some parts of it could be.
Persons: Luigi Mangione, Brian Thompson, Mangione, John Wren, IPG Philippe Krakowsky, Wren, Omnicom It's, Publicis, Snoop Dogg, it's, Insider's Lara O'Reilly, creatives, Simon Francis, Lara, William Ritchie, Blackstone, Chelsea Jia Feng, Jane Fraser, Aaron Neyer, Sylvia Duran, Camila Ferraz, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, , Jimmy Donaldson, Rupert Murdoch Getty, Rupert Murdoch, Rupert, Lachlan, Murdoch, they've, Elon Musk, Sundar Pichai, Benjamin Netanyahu, Janet Yellen, Hallam Bullock, Grace Lett, Ella Hopkins, Amanda Yen, Lisa Ryan, New York Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Ivy League, Big Tech, Monday, Omnicom, Interpublic, Groupe, WPP, Flock Associates, WY Partners, Apollo, KKR, Industry, Getty, Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Citi, Google, PowerPoint, Elon, Wall Street, Summit Locations: Pennsylvania, Paris, China, bitcoin, MrBeast City, California, Jerusalem, Stockholm, Sweden, London, Chicago, New York
This person is one of over a dozen Amazon employees, investors, and analysts that BI interviewed to better understand Jassy's first 3 years as CEO. Andy Jassy replaced Jeff Bezos (pictured here) as Amazon's CEO in July 2021. In his first 3 years as CEO, Jassy has lost many senior staff. Amazon's spokesperson said the company has "strong retention and continuity" among senior leaders. Amazon's spokesperson said the company is making "huge investments" in AI across AWS and the retail business.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, Jeff Bezos, Jassy, Bezos, EMMANUEL DUNAND, Mark Shmulik, Bernstein, Bernstein's Shmulik, He's, Shmulik, Amazon's, That's, spokespeople, Jassy doesn't, Doug Herrington, Jay Carney, Dave Limp, Adam Selipsky, Dave Clark, Clark, Ted S, Babak Parviz, Parviz, Mark Mahaney, We're, Jeff Organizations: Service, Business, Amazon, Washington Post, BI, Warren, Echo, Microsoft, AWS Locations: Seattle
For most of its 27 years as a public company, Amazon investors have been asked to sacrifice profit for growth. In its first-quarter earnings report on Tuesday, Amazon's operating margin reached double digits for the first time on record. Operating income more than tripled in the quarter to $15.3 billion, while net income also jumped more than 200% to $10.4 billion. Almost two-thirds of operating income for all of Amazon came from AWS, which is now generating over $100 billion in annualized revenue. Operating income will be $10 billion to $14 billion, up from $7.7 billion a year earlier.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Andy, Andy Jassy's, Tom Forte, CNBC's, Brian Olsavsky, Olsavsky, That's, Jassy, he's Organizations: Amazon, Seattle, Maxim Group, Revenue, Amazon Web Services, AWS, Technology, Microsoft, Google Locations: Seattle
What history shows: GM beats earnings estimates 87% of the time, according to data from Bespoke Investment Group. Alphabet is set to report earnings after the close. What history shows: Alphabet averages a 1.45% gain after reporting earnings, Bespoke data shows. What history shows: Amazon exceeds earnings expectations 63% of the time, according to Bespoke. What history shows: Meta shares have risen in three of the last four earnings days, per Bespoke, including a 23.3% rally.
Persons: Bard chatbot, Gus Richard, David Palmer, Palmer, MSFT, Jordan Novet, bode, Leslie Josephs, Max, Alaska's, AAPL, AMZN, Mark Zuckerberg Organizations: Meta, Apple, ., Motors, CNBC, Tuesday, United Auto Workers, LSEG, Investment, AMD, Starbucks, Microsoft, Management, Wednesday Boeing, Alaska Airlines, FAA, Boeing, United Airlines, Web, Mizuho Securities, Nvidia Locations: Northland, China, Alaska
Amazon previously said it is seeing a decrease in growth in AWS as business clients reallocated their spending to reduce costs. Investors are also looking to see how Amazon's advertising business intersects with more language models and generative AI. The company's advertising business was seeing "robust growth" due to its machine learning investment, Chief Executive Andy Jassy said in the first-quarter earnings call. Net sales of Amazon's advertising business in the first quarter were $9.51 billion. Amazon's first-quarter operating income was $4.77 billion a 74.4%% increase from $2.74 billion in the fourth-quarter and a 30.1% increase from last year.
Persons: Tom Forte, Forte, Brian Olsavsky, Andy Jassy, Arun Sundaram, China's Temu, Sundaram, Amazon's, Arriana McLymore, Aurora Ellis Organizations: Investors, Web Services, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Davidson Companies, YouTube, Thomson Locations: NY, Refinitiv, Singapore, United States, New York City
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRetail business is a big opportunity for Amazon investors, says Gene MunsterGene Munster, Deepwater Asset Management managing partner, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Amazon's 'Prime Day' sale, why the company is becoming an enterprise services company, and more.
Persons: Gene Munster Gene Munster Organizations: Deepwater Asset Management
Jim says Amazon investors are 'not giving up on' this area of the company's business which he says has ample room for growthBig tech can't be held back. Amazon stock headed 3% higher Thursday even after the FTC sued the company over Prime subscriptions. Meanwhile, shares of Ford are coming back after the automaker won a $9.2 billion loan from the Department of Energy to build three new EV battery manufacturing plants. This will allow the company to ramp up EV production now that supply chain pressures have eased.
Persons: Jim Organizations: FTC, Ford, Department of Energy, EV
Bernstein, one of the top Wall Street research firms, wrote an open letter to Amazon's leadership. Jassy wrote in the letter that the company is optimistic about grocery, satellite internet, international businesses, and healthcare services. Bernstein wrote. Bernstein wrote. Investor communications win investor trust: Amazon's leadership should cut down on the rhetoric and share more specifics with investors.
Persons: Bernstein, you'd, Andy Jassy, Mark Shmulik, Amazon's, Jassy, There's, Eugene Kim Organizations: Amazon, Healthcare, Whole, Amazon Media, Alexa, Investor Locations: Amazon, Brazil, Mexico, Singapore, India
Here are Monday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Deutsche Bank reiterates Apple as buy Deutsche said it's standing by its buy rating on the stock after reviewing Apple's quarterly 10-Q filing. JPMorgan upgrades American to overweight from neutral and downgrades Southwest to neutral from overweight. JPMorgan initiates Alcoa as overweight JPMorgan said in its initiation of Alcoa that it sees a "favorable aluminum metal pricing environment in the coming years." Bank of America upgrades Fortinet to buy from neutral Bank of America said the cybersecurity company has solid fundamentals. JPMorgan upgrades Scotts Miracle-Gro to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said the fertilizer company is a "reasonable investment."
New mandate requires most office workers to come into the office at least 3 times a week starting in May. About 3 weeks since the announcement of the new policy, more than 29,200 Amazon employees have signed an internal petition opposing the mandate. Roughly 30,000 Amazon employees have joined that Slack channel, which was created shortly after the RTO announcement. In the petition, Amazon employees added internal data supporting continued remote work and dozens of comments explaining why they oppose the change. A 2013 Stanford University study of Chinese workers found that remote workers are 13% more productive than their in-office counterparts.
Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon and then CEO of Amazon Web Services, speaks at the WSJD Live conference in Laguna Beach, California, October 25, 2016. It was a brutal year for mega-cap tech stocks across the board. Only Tesla , down 68%, and Meta , off 66%, have had a worse year among the most valuable tech companies. That drove Amazon's stock to record highs as sales soared. It's since paused or abandoned plans to open some new facilities, and its head count shrank in the second quarter.
Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon and then CEO of Amazon Web Services, speaks at the WSJD Live conference in Laguna Beach, California, October 25, 2016. Mike Blake | ReutersThroughout its first 25 years as a public company, Amazon has operated under a singular mantra, often to the chagrin of Wall Street: growth is more important than profits. No wager was bigger than Amazon Web Services, the cloud-computing unit that Amazon launched in 2006 and that Jassy led until his promotion last year. "They're completely unafraid to kill something that's not working," said Craig Berman, a former Amazon vice president for global communications. Former Amazon employees Colin Bryar and Bill Carr wrote about the process in their 2021 book, "Working Backwards: Insights, Stories, and Secrets from Inside Amazon."
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