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Igor Golovniov | Sopa Images | Lightrocket via Getty ImagesLONDON — Britain's competition regulator is preparing remedies aimed at solving competition issues in the multibillion-pound cloud computing industry. The sources, who preferred to remain anonymous given the investigation's sensitive nature, said that the cloud market remedies could be announced within the next two weeks. Amazon is the largest player in the market, offering cloud services via its Amazon Web Services (AWS) arm. Ofcom subsequently referred its cloud review to the CMA to address competition issues in the market. She is expected to outline plans for a review in 2025 into whether the CMA should more frequently use behavioral remedies when approving deals, the FT reported.
Persons: Igor Golovniov, there's, Sarah Cardell, Keir Starmer Organizations: Ofcom, Microsoft, Getty, Markets, CNBC, CMA, Amazon, Web Services, Google, Chatham House, Financial Times Locations: U.S, U.K
AdvertisementAWS hired Julia White as its new chief marketing officer, replacing Raejeanne Skillern. Amazon Web Services has a new marketing chief. On Monday, AWS's CEO, Matt Garman, told employees that the company had hired Julia White, a former SAP and Microsoft executive, as its new chief marketing officer. Before that, she spent almost 20 years at Microsoft in various roles, including corporate vice president for the Azure cloud computing unit. The company recently added Colleen Aubrey, a former Amazon advertising executive, as a senior vice president of AWS Solutions, and Baskar Sridharan, an ex-Google Cloud vice president, as a vice president of AI/ML services.
Persons: Julia White, Raejeanne Skillern, White, Matt Garman, Einat Weiss White, Raejeanne, Skillern, Colleen Aubrey, Baskar, Adam Selipsky, Matt Wood, Garman, Julia, she's, Matt Organizations: SAP, Microsoft, AWS, Amazon, AWS Solutions, Google Cloud, Corporate
Recommendations from Wall Street can help them make informed decisions on stocks and seek solid long-term returns. Top-rated analysts pay attention to multiple aspects when selecting stocks of companies with solid fundamentals and strong execution. Bearing that in mind, here are three stocks favored by the Street's top pros, according to TipRanks, a platform that ranks analysts based on their past performance. See Amazon Stock Charts on TipRanks. Mahaney thinks UBER will gain from autonomous vehicle rollouts, given its position as the largest ride-sharing demand aggregator.
Persons: Brian White, White, TipRanks, Mark Mahaney, Mahaney, Andrew Harte, Jack Dorsey, Harte Organizations: Web Services, Amazon, Technologies, Uber's, Business, Uber Technologies, BTIG Locations: AMZN
The Big Four — EY, Deloitte, KPMG, and PwC — are the world's largest accounting and consulting firms. AdvertisementDeloitte, EY, KPMG, and PwC are the world's largest accounting and consulting firms, known as the Big Four. The Big Four offer companies services such as workforce transformations, reshaping corporate finance portfolios, assurance, valuation, and optimizing the use of technology. AdvertisementThough not as stark a slowdown as Deloitte or EY, growth at PwC still dropped noticeably compared to the 9.9% rise reported for the previous 12 months. In February 2024, it unveiled a tax AI assistant for 2,300 PwC tax professionals in the UK to use.
Persons: PwC, , Antonia Wade, EY, Ernst & Young, Janet Truncale, Carmine Di Sibio, Jack Taylor, Joe Ucuzoglu, Jim Spellman, Price Waterhouse, Mohamed Kande, Bill Thomas, Liam McBurney Organizations: Deloitte, KPMG, Service, EY, Ernst, Getty, Revenue, Assurance, PwC, Deloitte Deloitte, Deloitte Global, Equity, Nvidia, Google, AWS, Coopers, Street Journal, Big Locations: London, PwC, Asia, Pacific, Amsterdam
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMushkin: Amazon, Walmart, and Costco are taking an enormous amount of shareScott Mushkin, CEO of R5 Capital, highlights strong retail spending, with Amazon, Walmart, and Costco leading the market. He favors Walmart for its margin potential and Amazon for AWS growth, while cautioning about challenges in hard-line retail due to rising interest rates and deflation.
Persons: Scott Mushkin Organizations: Walmart, Costco, R5, Amazon
Amazon plans to integrate its AI chatbot Q with Microsoft's Office 365 service. Amazon Q, launched in April, faces competition from Microsoft's own Copilot AI assistant. At the moment, most Q users access the Amazon AI chatbot through its website, or messaging apps like Slack and Teams. It's part of a set of new Q features Amazon is working on, including a browser extension, the document said. This year alone, he said, Amazon Q has "resolved over 1 million internal Amazon developer questions," saving more than 450,000 hours of work.
Persons: , Patrick Neighorn, Q, Matt Garman Organizations: Microsoft's, Service, Microsoft, Business, Excel, Amazon, AWS, Gartner, LinkedIn Locations: Microsoft's
AWS is negotiating a potential $475 million AI cloud deal with IBM. Under such a deal, IBM would use AWS's EC2 servers that come equipped with Nvidia's AI chips, the document stated. The negotiations also highlight continued demand for Nvidia GPUs. Efforts here have been mixed so far, and it's unclear if an IBM deal would include access to these homegrown Amazon components. AdvertisementStill, an AI cloud deal like this would be a further boost for AWS.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, Jassy Organizations: IBM, Nvidia, Service, Web Services, Business, IBM Research, AWS, Watson, Amazon
One thing that's widely understood is the artificial intelligence revolution is still in its infancy, and Nvidia is the go-to company for what's needed to run AI workloads. Microsoft : "We expect capital expenditures to increase on a sequential basis, given our cloud and AI demand signals," CFO Amy Hood said. Put another way, can the world's most valuable company, at nearly $3.6 trillion, get even more valuable? On current numbers, Nvidia is trading at about 37x calendar year 2025 earnings estimates. Visitors check out Nvidia's AI technology at the 2024 Apsara Conference in Hangzhou, China, on September 19, 2024.
Persons: hasn't, Donald Trump's, Trump, Piper Sandler, Morgan Stanley, Nvidia's, NVDA, OpenAI's, we're, Anat Ashkenazi, Susan Li, Andy Jassy, Amy Hood, Hood, Piper, Blackwell, Hopper, Melius, , Jensen Huang –, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, Wall Street, White, Nvidia —, Melius, Blackwell, Trump, Google, AWS, Microsoft, Melius Research, Biden, CNBC, Visitors, Nurphoto, Getty Locations: China, CapEx, Beijing, U.S, Hangzhou
Jeff Bezos congratulated Donald Trump on winning the presidential election. Here's a history of Bezos and Trump's relationship. Following Trump's election that year, Bezos was one of several tech leaders who met with the president-elect in a summit Bezos later described as "very productive." Trump and AmazonWhile campaigning for the 2016 presidential election, Trump said Amazon would have "such problems" if he became president . In 2019, Trump bashed Bezos and the Post as he appeared to talk about Bezos' divorce from MacKenzie Scott.
Persons: Jeff Bezos, Donald Trump, They've, Here's, , Bezos, Hillary Clinton, Trump, The Washington Post Trump, MacKenzie Scott, Jeff Bozo, Kamala Harris Organizations: Service, Trump, Amazon, United States Post Office, Post, Department, Microsoft, Amazon Web, DoD, AWS, Cloud Service, The Washington Post, Washington Post, Amazon Washington Locations: America, U.S
Amazon aims to adapt to tech changes and competitive pressures, especially with AI. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. During an internal all-hands meeting on Tuesday, Jassy explained why the company recently announced a plan to reduce the number of managers. Only a few companies survive for 50 or 100 years in the tech industry because "the world changes, technology changes, competitors change, companies change," he said. "We have a chance to build the most remarkable company in the history of business," Jassy said.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, Jassy, Peter DeSantis, DeSantis, I'm, it's, there's Organizations: Service, Business, Amazon Locations: AWS's
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy denied speculation that the company's five-day in-office mandate was made to further reduce head count or appease city officials. "We urge you to reconsider your comments and position on the proposed 5-day in-office mandate," the letter said. The letter included anecdotes from AWS staffers who detailed how the five-day in-office mandate will impact their "life and work." Jassy acknowledged Tuesday that the five-day in-office mandate will be an adjustment for employees. WATCH: AWS CEO says employees unhappy with 5-day office mandate can leave
Persons: Andy Jassy, I've, Jassy, Matt Garman, Garman, he's Organizations: New York Times DealBook, Jazz At Lincoln Center, Amazon, CNBC, Employees, Reuters, Amazon Web Services, Seattle Locations: New York City
The news Morgan Stanley raised its Amazon price target Monday to $230 per share from $210 — implying 16% upside to Friday's close. Morgan Stanley expects Amazon's shipping and fulfillment cost per package to decrease about 3% each year from 2023 to 2026, reaching $6.51 by 2026. Bottom line Jim Cramer wrote in his Sunday column that Amazon is the "best stock so far" of this earnings season, citing skill execution across all of its businesses. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, D.A, Davidson, Jim Cramer, Jim Cramer's, Jim, David Paul Morris Organizations: Amazon, Web Services, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: San Francisco
Insider Today: Big Tech battle royale
  + stars: | 2024-11-03 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . On the agenda today:Related Video How Twitter panic took down Silicon Valley BankBut first: Takeaways from a big week in Big Tech. All about AI, all the timeGetty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIThe trillion-dollar giants of Big Tech reported earnings this week, beating estimates and committing billions to AI. The disappearing tech freebiesMint Images - David Arky/Getty, masterzphotois/Getty, Tyler Le/BIAfter years of upping the ante with everything from exercise classes to laundry services, tech companies are clamping down on freebies.
Persons: , we'll, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Sundar Pichai, execs, Mark Zuckerberg, Natalie Ammari, Tesla, James Yates, David Arky, Tyler Le, BI's Graham Flanagan, Matt Garman Organizations: Business, Service, Big, Big Tech, Apple Apple, underwhelmed, Apple Intelligence, Meta Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft Microsoft, United States Army, Amazon Locations: Big Tech, China, Italy, Spain, New Zealand, Hawaii
Wall Street analysts think Amazon is only at the beginning of a new era of growth. Here's what analysts at some of the biggest shops on Wall Street are saying about Amazon's latest earnings report. His $250 per share price target implies more than 34% upside from Thursday's close. "Another margin upside surprise supports our retail margin efficiency upside thesis, while AWS is still in the early innings of a big AI cycle and is investing accordingly," Post said. The analyst also increased his 2025 full-year earnings per share forecast by roughly 4%.
Persons: Doug Anmuth, Anmuth, Justin Post, Lee Horowitz, " Horowitz, Ronald Josey's, Josey Organizations: Web Services, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Citi
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said AWS gives the company a leg up in the AI race. Jassy said AWS has shown that Amazon can handle the logistics for scaling AI. AdvertisementAmazon CEO Andy Jassy on Thursday explained why he thinks the company is well-positioned to excel in AI: Amazon Web Services. Jassy talked up the cloud-computing unit on Amazon's third-quarter earnings call, defending the company's aggressive investments in AI. Amazon beat Wall Street's third-quarter expectations on revenue and earnings per share, with the stock rising 6% in after-hours trading.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Jassy, , Sundar Pichai Organizations: Service, Web Services, Amazon, Companies, AWS, Big Tech
Companies beat expectations, with some boosted by large cloud growth. AdvertisementThe tech giants Meta, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft reported earnings this week, and investors were laser-focused on the results of AI investments. Cloud is kingMicrosoft, Alphabet, and Amazon saw significant growth in their cloud businesses, fueled by increased demand. Jeremy Goldman, EMARKETER's senior director of briefings, told BI that Microsoft's cloud business had decelerated from the "breakneck pace" of previous quarters. Related storiesWhile Google reported stronger cloud growth, Microsoft still leads it in cloud market share, and both are behind Amazon Web Services.
Persons: , Kate Leaman, Jeremy Goldman, EMARKETER's, Amy Hood, Dan Romanoff, Andy Jassy, Tracy Woo, Forrester, AWS's, Jassy, Rufus, Sundar Pichai, Pichai, Mark Zuckerberg, Hood, Michael Field, Jaejune Kim, Lisa Su, we've Organizations: Apple, Companies, Service, Microsoft, Amazon, Morningstar, Google, Amazon Web, Amazon Web Services, Investment, Big Tech, Bank of America Securities, Meta, Nvidia, SK Hynix, Samsung, AMD, Services
Amazon said revenue in its cloud unit increased 19% in third quarter, just missing analyst estimates. AWS leads the cloud infrastructure market over Google and Microsoft and is an important source of profit for Amazon. On Tuesday Alphabet said revenue from Google Cloud, which includes cloud applications as well as infrastructure, totaled $11.35 billion, up 35%. Microsoft said Wednesday that revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 33%. Google Cloud reported an operating margin of 17%.
Persons: Matt Garman, Oracle, Garman, Databricks, Naveen Rao Organizations: Amazon Web Services, Tech, Amazon, Revenue, Google, Microsoft, AWS, CNBC, TechCrunch Locations: Laguna Beach , California
"I think we've proven over time that we can drive enough operating income and free cash flow to make this a very successful return on invested capital business," Jassy said. "We expect the same thing will happen here with generative AI." The jump in spending is primarily being driven by generative AI investments, Jassy said. A day earlier, Alphabet CFO Anat Ashkenazi warned the company expects capital spending to grow in 2025. Amazon has said its cloud unit has picked up more business from companies that need infrastructure to deploy generative AI models.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Jassy, OpenAI, we're, Mark Zuckerberg, Anat Ashkenazi, It's, it's Organizations: Amazon Web Services, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon Locations: OpenAI
Amazon's AI services are rapidly growing, with significant demand for AWS's AI chips. AdvertisementJust when you thought Big Tech executives couldn't get more bullish on AI, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy upped the ante on Thursday. Amazon has launched a number of new AI services in recent years, including Bedrock, an AI development tool, the Rufus shopping agent, and homegrown AI chips called Inferentia and Trainium. Amazon's AI business is "growing three times faster at its stage of evolution than AWS did itself," he added. AdvertisementCustomers are realizing that AI model training and inference "could get costly" and AWS's AI chips can be "very compelling" in terms of its price, the CEO explained.
Persons: Jassy, , couldn't, Andy Jassy, We've, unravels ChatGPT, Rufus Organizations: Service, Big Tech, Amazon, Services Locations: capex
OpenAI is reportedly teaming up with Broadcom and TSMC to build custom AI chips, per Reuters. OpenAI could have its custom chips by 2026 but is reportedly dropping plans to build its own fabs. AdvertisementBuilding custom AI chips has long been the preserve of a select few tech companies — but OpenAI might be about to join the party. AdvertisementOpenAI's move, which will also reportedly see it incorporate AMD chips into its supply mix, means it would reduce its dependency on Nvidia, the market leader for AI chips. While it's unclear how much OpenAI's reported chip-building push will cost, creating custom AI chips doesn't come cheap.
Persons: OpenAI, , Kate Leaman, Rahul Kulkarni, Maia, Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Gil Luria, Davidson, Luria, Edward Wilford, Sam Altman, Altman, Pierre Ferragu Organizations: Broadcom, Meta, Google, Service, Reuters, BI, Microsoft, Apple, Tech, Amazon Web, AWS, Nvidia, Big Tech, Street, New, Research, New York Times
Amazon reported a much better-than-expected third quarter Thursday, with strong growth across online sales, its cloud business and advertising. Commentary Cloud unit Amazon Web Services (AWS) revenue in the third quarter was essentially in line with the consensus forecast. Growth on a constant currency basis held steady from the second quarter at 19%, breaking a three-quarter streak of accelerating revenue growth. Quarterly results As for the rest of the company, Amazon delivered revenue beats across Online Stores (7% revenue growth), Subscription Services (11% revenue growth), and Advertising Services (19% revenue growth). Smaller businesses like Physical Stores (5% revenue growth) and Other (7% revenue growth) were better than expected too.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Jassy, it's, Kuiper, That's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Nathan Stirk Organizations: Amazon, LSEG, Management, Walmart, Target, Microsoft, North America, International, Web Services, AWS, Subscription Services, Advertising Services, Seller Services, CNBC, Getty Locations: North, North America, United Kingdom, Germany, Sutton Coldfield, England
Wall Street faces another key litmus test Thursday with results from megacap technology giants Apple and Amazon . For Apple, Wall Street also wants to see its latest iPhone pick up steam, and investors seek more insight into when the company's AI initiative will begin lifting sales. For Apple, Wall Street expects EPS of $1.60 on $94.58 billion in revenue. Amazon's retail business also remains top of mind for Wall Street ahead of the busy holding shopping period. Apple For Apple, Wall Street is eagerly searching for signs of strong demand for its latest iPhone model and updates on its AI strategy.
Persons: Jason Helfstein, Brent Thill, Bank of America's Justin Post, Doug Anmuth, Goldman Sachs, Eric Sheridan, Ronald Josey, Morgan Stanley, Erik Woodring, Jefferies, Edison Lee, Samik Chatterjee, Davidson's Gil Luria, Wamsi Mohan, Tim Long, AAPL, Long Organizations: Apple, Nasdaq, Microsoft, Wall, LSEG, Amazon, StreetAccount, Jefferies, Bank of America's, Apple Intelligence, " Bank of America, Barclays Locations: Amazon
CFRA trimmed its Amazon price target to $219 a share on October 21, indicating 13% upside ahead. The firm has a "buy" rating on the stock and a $210 price target, which implies an 8.3% gain from current levels. The firm said investors have toned down margin expectations due to Amazon's spending in new investment areas, such as Project Kuiper. AdvertisementWedbush reiterated its "outperform" rating and $225 price target, implying a 16% gain from current levels. Morgan Stanley has a $210 price target for the stock, representing upside of about 8% from Wednesday's share price.
Persons: , Arun Sundaram, Sundaram, Justin Post, BofA, Scott Devitt, Wedbush, Morgan Stanley, Bullish, Brian Nowak Organizations: Service, CFRA, Bank of America, Amazon Web Services, 3Q, JPMorgan, Wedbush Securities
AWS CEO Matt Garman has been sent a letter from employees protesting his pro-RTO comments. Over 500 employees have signed a letter, sent on Wednesday, urging Garman to reconsider the plans. AdvertisementAmazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman is facing backlash from some employees over his comments about its return-to-office policy, according to an open letter obtained by Business Insider. The policy is stricter than at Amazon's peer companies and, by some accounts, stricter than Amazon's office work policy before the pandemic. The letter has been signed by 523 staff from Amazon and AWS, with 172 of those including their names.
Persons: Matt Garman, Garman, , Matt doesn't, Elizabeth Rutledge, Garman's, Andy Jassy, Margaret Callahan, we're, Amazon's, Jyoti Mann, Ashley Stewart Organizations: Service, Web, Business, AWS, BI, American Express, Amazon Locations: jyotimann
The big storyPresidential betsChris duMond; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIWe're less than a week from election day, but one group can already claim victory: betting markets. Kalshi's legal victory in October over the CFTC to offer election betting paved the way for the trend. iStock; Rebecca Zisser/BIThe betting market's biggest tests might come after the election. Betting markets have Trump as a heavy favorite, whereas traditional polls indicate a tight race. AdvertisementShould Trump win in a landslide, it could strengthen the case for using betting markets as a key tool for election analysis.
Persons: , Chris duMond, Chip Somodevilla, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Matthew Fox, Donald Trump, Polymarket, iStock, Rebecca Zisser, Nate Silver, Tesla, Zuckerberg, Citadel's, Justin Lubell, Lubell, Steve Schwarzman, Ken Griffin, Trump, Tyler Le, Harris, Sundar Pichai, Elon Musk, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Service, Apple, CFTC, Trump, TikTok, Meta Connect, Meta, Bank of America, Blackstone, Republican, Amazon, AWS, Five Apple Intelligence, Google, The Washington Post, Street, Microsoft, Starbucks Locations: French, New York, London
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