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More executives are seeking protection, a private security firm chief told The Financial Times. Steve Jones, the chief executive of security company Allied Universal, told The Financial Times that global political instability had created increased demand for security services. AdvertisementLast year, Alex Bomberg, chief executive of Intelligent Protection International, told Financial News that demand for executive security had doubled in 12 months. According to Allied's World Security Report, in 2022, companies lost more than $1 trillion in revenue due to physical security incidents. AdvertisementOne in four publicly listed companies reported a drop in their value after a physical security incident over the last year, the report said.
Persons: Steve Jones, Jones, We've, Allianz's, Mark, Sundar, Alex Bomberg, It's, that's Organizations: Financial Times, Service, Allied Universal, Fortune Business, Trump, Allianz Insurance, Palestine, Group, Web Services, Google, Business, Companies, Meta, Intelligent Protection, Financial News Locations: Israel, Washington ,, Germany
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
Business Insider obtained a recording of Amazon CEO Andy Jassy's latest all-hands meeting. Jassy said Amazon's RTO policy is not a 'backdoor layoff' strategy. The RTO policy aims to strengthen company culture, not cut costs, he said. This is very much about our culture and strengthening our culture," Jassy said, adding that the only city Amazon notified ahead of time about its RTO mandate was Seattle. Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman said in a staff meeting last month that 9 out of 10 Amazon employees he'd spoken with were "excited" by the change.
Persons: Andy Jassy's, Jassy, Amazon's, , Andy Jassy, Matt Garman, there's, I'm, it's Organizations: Amazon, Service, Business, Web Locations: Seattle
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
Nvidia is replacing Intel in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P Dow Jones Indices said Friday. AdvertisementNvidia is joining the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P Dow Jones Indices said on Friday, replacing its rival Intel, which held the position for 25 years. AdvertisementThe Sherwin-Williams Company (SHW) will also replace Dow Inc. (DOW) in the index. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, or DJIA, is made up of 30 blue-chip companies, from Amazon to Walt Disney Co., and is often used as a benchmark for the broader US economy. Now, with its entrance into the DJIA, it only underlines the mainstream acceptance of Nvidia as a market leader.
Persons: Dow, , Sherwin, missteps, Pat Gelsinger, Jensen Huang, Jensen, Dan Ives, JPMorgan Chase, Johnson, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Nvidia, Intel, Dow Jones, Service, Williams Company, Dow Inc, DOW, Walt Disney Co, Amazon Web Services, Corporate Finance Institute, Microsoft, Walmart, JPMorgan, UnitedHealth, Procter, Gamble Company, Cola Company, Chevron Corporation, Merck, Co, Cisco Systems, McDonald's Corporation, Business Machines Corporation, IBM, American Express Company, Caterpillar, Verizon Communications, Walt Disney Company, Goldman, Honeywell International, Nike, Boeing Company, Intel Corporation, 3M Company, Travelers Companies, Dow Locations: Amazon, Silicon Valley, Susquehanna
With Wall Street laser focused on cloud computing this week, Google outpaced its rivals in growth, a key sign for investors that the internet company is gaining traction in artificial intelligence. Amazon Web Services, which remains the market leader, grew 19% to $27.45 billion, meaning it's more than twice the size of Google Cloud but expanding about half as quickly. Second-place Microsoft said revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 33% from a year earlier. Five of the six trillion-dollar tech companies reported results this week, with AI chipmaker Nvidia as the outlier. Google reported a 17% cloud operating margin in the third quarter, after first turning a profit last year.
Persons: Sundar Pichai, Melissa Otto Organizations: Munich, Google, Web Services, Microsoft, Nvidia, Argus Research, CNBC Locations: Hof, Munich, Germany
Nvidia is replacing Intel in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P Dow Jones Indices said Friday. AdvertisementNvidia is joining the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P Dow Jones Indices said on Friday, replacing its rival Intel, which held the position for 25 years. AdvertisementThe Dow Jones Industrial Average, or DJIA, is made up of 30 blue-chip companies, from Amazon to Walt Disney Co., and is often used as a benchmark for the broader US economy. Since 1999, Intel has held its position on the DJIA to reflect the state of the larger semiconductor industry. AdvertisementNow, with its entrance into the DJIA, it only underlines the mainstream acceptance of Nvidia as a market leader.
Persons: Dow, , missteps, Pat Gelsinger, Jensen Huang, Jensen, Dan Ives Organizations: Nvidia, Intel, Dow Jones, Service, Walt Disney Co, Amazon Web Services, Corporate Finance Institute Locations: Amazon, Silicon Valley, Susquehanna
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
Apple — Shares dropped 1.6% even after the technology giant surpassed top-and-bottom line estimates for the recent quarter, and showed 6% revenue growth. Avis Budget — The car rental company slipped 1.5% after posting third-quarter earnings that fell short of Wall Street's estimates. Chevron topped Wall Street's third-quarter estimates and returned more than $7 billion to shareholders during the period through buybacks and dividends. Juniper Networks posted preliminary third-quarter earnings and revenue that topped estimates, but did not provide financial guidance for 2024, citing its pending acquisition by Hewlett Packard Enterprise . Revenue of $1.33 billion topped the FactSet estimate of $1.26 billion.
Persons: Atlassian, FactSet, Abbott, Ernst, Young, Wall, LSEG, , Jesse Pound, Sean Conlon, Pia Singh, Sarah Min Organizations: Amazon Web Services, Apple —, Intel —, LSEG, Abbott, Boeing —, . Avis Budget, Chevron, Exxon Mobil —, Exxon, Juniper Networks, Hewlett Packard Enterprise Locations: Europe, Missouri
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
Tony Fadell said Apple's staggered rollout of its AI features is smart. Apple Intelligence features became available Monday with iOS 18.1. Apple's AI features launched on iPhones with the release of iOS 18.1 on Monday. "People were like, 'I downloaded it,' and they were like, 'Apple's AI is meh,'" Fadell said. AdvertisementDuring Apple's earnings call on Thursday, CEO Tim Cook talked more about Apple's AI strategy, which plans to release additional Apple Intelligence features in December.
Persons: Tony Fadell, Fadell, Apple's, , Apple, Siri, Tim Cook, Cook Organizations: Apple Intelligence, Service, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Big Tech, Constellation Energy, Amazon, Amazon Web Services Locations: SMRs, Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand
The company posted earnings of $1.88 per share, excluding items, on revenue of $52.28 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet called for adjusted earnings per share of $1.62 on revenue of $50.90 billion. Intel — Shares popped 9% after the chipmaker topped third-quarter earnings estimates and shared upbeat quarterly guidance. The company posted adjusted earnings of 17 cents per share on $13.28 billion in revenue. Chevron also returned a record of more than $7 billion to shareholders in the quarter through buybacks and dividends.
Persons: Health —, Cardinal, FactSet, Atlassian, Donald Trump, Ernst, Ernst & Young, Avis, , Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Michelle Fox Theobald, Sean Conlon, Samantha Subin Organizations: Health, Boeing —, Intel, Amazon, Web Services, Apple —, Trump Media & Technology Group, Communications, Abbott Laboratories, Abbott, Ernst &, Avis Budget, LSEG, Chevron Locations: Europe, buybacks
Amazon shares jumped 7% on Friday and neared an all-time high after the company reported better-than-expected earnings, driven by growth in its cloud computing and advertising businesses. Revenue increased 11% in the quarter to $158.9 billion, topping the $157.2 billion estimate of analysts surveyed by LSEG. Sales in the Amazon Web Services cloud business increased 19% to $27.4 billion, coming in just shy of analysts' estimates, according to StreetAccount. That was an acceleration from 12% a year ago, but trailed growth at rivals Microsoft and Google , where cloud revenue increased 33% and 35%, respectively. The midpoint of that range, $185 billion, fell short of the average analyst estimate of $186.2 billion, according to LSEG.
Persons: Roth MKM, Brian Olsavsky, Andy Jassy, Jassy, we're, — CNBC's Ari Levy Organizations: Amazon, Revenue, LSEG, Services, Microsoft, Google, Nvidia, Meta
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. Jim Cramer said the potential rate cuts next week and possibly again in December provide a "bullish backdrop" for the overall market, favoring many of our stocks that benefit from lower rates. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, we're, Jim, Stocks, Jim Cramer's Organizations: CNBC, Federal Reserve, BlackRock, Web Services, Chevron, Exxon, Intel, AMD Locations: Thursday's, oversold, Europe, Ukraine
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 set to report Q3 earnings after the bell
  + stars: | 2024-10-31 | by ( Annie Palmer | In Annierpalmer | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
Amazon will report results for the third quarter after the bell Thursday. Earnings are growing much faster, due largely to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy's widespread cost-cutting efforts. Amazon is expected to report operating income of $14.7 billion during the quarter, up more than 31% from a year earlier, according to StreetAccount. During the third quarter, Amazon held its annual Prime Day megasale in July. WATCH: What to expect from Meta and Amazon earnings
Persons: Brian Olsavsky, Donald Trump, Olsavsky, Andy, Jassy, Jeff Bezos, Jassy's, Brad Erickson, CNBC's, megasale, Amazon, Oppenheimer, Jason Helfstein, SpaceX's, Helfstein, hasn't Organizations: LSEG, LSEG Revenue, Web, Paris Olympics, Amazon, CNBC, Nasdaq, RBC Capital Markets, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Adobe Analytics, United Launch Alliance, . Space Force, Olsavsky Locations: U.S
In today's big story, Big Tech is pulling back on the freebies for its employees . The perks help recruit and retain talent and keep employees working at the office. Some Amazon employees aren't buying it. It's not all bad news for Amazon employees, though. Some Amazon employees support Jeff Bezos' controversial WaPo decision.
Persons: , David Arky, Tyler Le, Insider's Lara O'Reilly, Rob Price, Hugh Langley, Sydney Bradley, It's, Matt Garman, Frederic J . BROWN, BI's Jyoti Mann, Ashley Stewart, Garman, Stave Huffman, Spencer Platt, Natalie Ammari, Tesla, Meta, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Harris, Trump, you'll, Jeff Bezos, Bezos, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Service, Microsoft, SEC, Big Tech, Meta, Citibank, Tech, Services, Getty, Amazon Web Services, Amazon, BI, Google, Semiconductor, Intel, Washington Post, Apple Locations: OpenAI, AFP, New York, London
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
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
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
Endeavor has secured $7 million to modernize manufacturing with AI technology. San Francisco-based Endeavor, launched by 22-year-old Sahitya Senapathy, is developing an AI platform to help modernize manufacturing firms. Endeavor aims to automate many of the manual tasks in the industry, which otherwise consume a lot of time. AdvertisementThe startup uses large language models to automate administrative manufacturing processes, such as purchase orders, invoices, and shipping notices. Check out the 9-slide pitch deck it used to secure the fresh funds.
Persons: , Senapathy, they're Organizations: Endeavor, BI, Service, San, Business, Craft Ventures, Endeavor's, Heartland Ventures, Web Locations: San Francisco
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
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
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