Amazon (AMZN) Stock Dips After Strong Q1 Earnings — What Spooked Investors?

Table of Contents Amazon delivered an impressive first-quarter performance, yet shareholders weren’t celebrating. Following an initial bounce in after-hours trading Wednesday evening, AMZN shares retreated roughly 1.4% during Thursday’s session. Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN The headline figures appeared exceptional. The e-commerce and cloud computing giant delivered adjusted earnings of $2.78 per share against revenue of $181.5 billion. Analysts had projected earnings of just $1.63 per share on $177.3 billion in sales. The cloud computing segment stole the spotlight. Amazon Web Services generated $37.6 billion in revenue, representing a 28% year-over-year increase and surpassing the $36.9 billion analyst consensus. CEO Andy Jassy highlighted this as AWS’s strongest growth pace in 15 quarters. Yet Thursday’s market response revealed investor skepticism. The primary driver of concern centered on infrastructure spending. Amazon poured $44.2 billion into property and equipment during the first quarter, a substantial increase from the $25 billion invested in the comparable period last year. This aggressive spending campaign severely compressed free cash flow, which tumbled to merely $1.2 billion on a trailing twelve-month basis — representing a 95% decline from the previous year. The company maintained its full-year capital expenditure forecast of $200 billion, which BofA analyst Justin Post viewed favorably. He increased his price target from $298 to $310 while maintaining a Buy recommendation. A significant portion of Amazon’s reported net income of $30.3 billion stemmed from a $16.8 billion pre-tax valuation gain related to its Anthropic stake. Excluding this non-operating gain, adjusted EPS would approximate $1.56 — falling short of the Zacks consensus of $1.60. These accounting-fueled earnings beats typically trigger caution among institutional investors. When surface-level results appear stellar but operational fundamentals present a more nuanced picture, profit-taking often follows. Second-quarter projections also underwhelmed. Amazon forecasted revenue between $194 billion and $199 billion, exceeding Wall Street’s $189 billion expectation. However, operating income guidance ranging from $20 billion to $24 billion placed the midpoint at $22 billion — marginally below the $22.7 billion consensus. Artificial intelligence infrastructure investments dominated the narrative. On April 20, Amazon revealed that Anthropic pledged over $100 billion in AWS spending across the coming decade, including commitments to secure up to 5 gigawatts of Amazon’s proprietary Trainium chips. Jassy disclosed that Amazon has accumulated more than $225 billion in revenue commitments for its Trainium chip platform. The company also broadened its OpenAI collaboration this week, integrating OpenAI’s models and Codex agent into AWS offerings. This announcement followed Microsoft and OpenAI’s recent decision to dissolve their exclusive partnership. Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Deepak Mathivanan noted that “the AWS acceleration enabled by AI revenues is still in early stages,” emphasizing there was “a lot to like” in the quarterly performance. AMZN shares have climbed approximately 12% year-to-date, significantly outperforming the S&P 500’s 4.7% advance during the identical timeframe. Amazon’s operating margin reached a record 13.1% in the first quarter.