Alexa Helps Amazon’s Quarterly Profit Top $1 Bn for First Time 

Amazon has been striking deals to put Alexa in cars, refrigerators and alarm clocks.

Joseph Pisani
Tech News
Published:
File Photo of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos
i
File Photo of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos
(Photo: Reuters)

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It was a prime holiday season for Amazon – the online retailer's quarterly profit soared past $1 billion for the first time in its more than 20-year history as it sold more voice-activated gadgets, enlisted new Prime members and benefited from its recent purchase of Whole Foods.

The Seattle-based company’s profit was also helped by recent changes to the tax law, giving it a $789 million tax benefit during the fourth quarter.

Amazon, which got its start as an online bookstore in 1995, has ambitions that go far beyond online retailing. This week, for example, it announced plans to create a new health care company with JPMorgan Chase and Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway to find a lower cost solution for the three companies' employees.

It also sees its Alexa voice assistant as a big part of its future. Amazon has been striking deals to put Alexa in cars, refrigerators and alarm clocks, allowing users to ask it the weather out loud or shop on Amazon.com by voice.

Amazon said Thursday that it sold “tens of millions” of its Alexa-enabled Echo devices last year, but didn’t give specific numbers.

Jeff Bezos, Amazon's founder and CEO, said Alexa "far exceeded" the company's expectations.

We don’t see positive surprises of this magnitude very often — expect us to double down.
Jeff Bezos

Overall, Amazon reported net income of $1.9 billion, or $3.75 per share, in the three months ending 31 December. That blew past the $1.88 per share analysts expected, according to FactSet. Its profit was more than double the $749 million it reported in the same quarter a year ago.

Revenue soared 38 percent to $60.5 billion in the fourth quarter, beating the $59.8 billion analysts expected.

The company said its physical stores brought in revenue of $4.5 billion, mostly from Whole Foods.

Although the company has more than a dozen bookstores, Amazon's first big push into physical stores came in August when it completed a nearly $14 billion deal to buy the organic grocer and its 470 stores. Amazon was quick to make changes, slashing prices on yogurt, bananas and organic kale. It also started selling Echos and Kindle tablets near the grocer's produce.

Amazon executives said in a conference call Thursday that sales at Whole Foods were better than expected. They also said the company will make its Prime membership the grocer's loyalty program sometime later this year.

The company said it added more Prime members last year than any other year, but didn’t provide specific numbers. 

It did say that revenue from its subscription fees, which include Prime membership, rose 49 percent from a year before. Prime members pay $99 a year to get faster shipping and other perks, such as access to its video streaming service.

Amazon's headcount also swelled last year. The company had 566,000 employees at the end of 2017, up 66 percent from the year before. Some of that growth came from Whole Foods and its 89,000 employees, but the company said it also hired nearly 130,000 people around the world last year.

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The company, which has outgrown its Seattle headquarters, is in the process of selecting a place to build a second headquarters. It has narrowed down its options to 20 places after receiving 238 proposals from cities, states and regions in North America hoping to win over the fast-growing company and its promise to add 50,000 jobs and spend $5 billion in construction.

Looking ahead, Amazon said it expects first-quarter revenue between $47.75 billion and $50.75 billion. Analysts expected first-quarter revenue of $48.6 billion.

Amazon.com Inc.'s stock, which is up more than 22 percent so far this year, jumped 6 percent to $1,477 in after-hours trading on 1 February.

(This article has been published in an arrangement with the Associated Press)

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