Amazon's Profit Falls as Costs for Faster Shipping Soar

The effort to cut shipping time from two days to one is costing the company about $1.5 billion, nearly double what it previously said it would cost.

In this June 26, 2019 file photo, a worker sorts through items and places orders at the Amazon Fulfillment Center in Staten Island in New York.
In this June 26, 2019 file photo, a worker sorts through items and places orders at the Amazon Fulfillment Center in Staten Island in New York.
AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File

NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon's push for faster delivery is hurting its profits.

The online retailer said its third-quarter net income fell 26% from a year ago, missing Wall Street expectations. Its sales outlook for the holiday shopping season also disappointed analysts, and its stock sank 7% in after-hours trading.

Amazon is moving to cut its delivery time in half to one day instead of two. To do that, it's adding more workers in its warehouses and expanding its shipping network with more trucks, jets and package sorting facilities.

The effort is costing the company about $1.5 billion, nearly double what it previously said it would cost. But Amazon said the one-day shipping is attracting more customers and gets shoppers to spend more.

"It's a big investment," said Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, in a statement. "And it's the right long-term decision for customers."

This July 17, 2019 file photo shows an Amazon shipping truck at a fulfillment center in Phoenix. Amazon.com Inc. reports financial earns on Thursday, Oct. 24.This July 17, 2019 file photo shows an Amazon shipping truck at a fulfillment center in Phoenix. Amazon.com Inc. reports financial earns on Thursday, Oct. 24.AP Photo/Ross D. FranklinThe Seattle-based company reported net income of $2.1 billion in the three months ending Sept. 30, down from $2.9 billion a year ago.

Earnings per share came to $4.23. That's 36 cents less than what analysts expected, according to FactSet.

The company, which used to report razor-thin profits, has seen its quarterly profits grow in the past two years as it expanded into fast-growing businesses, such as cloud computing and advertising.

Sales at its cloud computing business, which powers video-streaming service Netflix and other companies, rose 35% from a year ago. And revenue in its "other" category, which the company said is mostly made up of its advertising business, jumped 44%.

But as Amazon grows it faces increasing scrutiny from regulators. The Justice Department opened an antitrust investigation of major tech companies and whether their platforms have hurt competition and stifled innovation. The department didn't name any companies, but it said online retailers were an area of "widespread concern." And the European Union is investigating how Amazon uses data from the small businesses that sell goods on its site.

On Thursday during a call with reporters, Amazon executives declined to answer any questions about regulation.

"I have nothing to report on that," said Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky.

Revenue for the quarter beat expectations, rising 24% to $70 billion. The third quarter included Amazon's made-up sales holiday "Prime Day," which has become one of the company's biggest shopping events of the year.

Amazon also saw a jump in headcount. It had 750,000 worldwide employees at the end of September, up nearly 100,000 from the previous three months. Besides adding workers in its warehouses to pack and ship boxes, the company said it's been hiring more software engineers and salespeople for its cloud business. Amazon is the second-biggest U.S.-based private employer, just behind rival Walmart.

For the current quarter, which includes the holiday shopping season, Amazon expects revenue between $80 billion and $86.5 billion. That's below the $87.4 billion analysts expected.

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