Amazon is moving closer to a $3 trillion market value after a strong first-quarter report, faster AWS growth, and a wider push into ultra-fast delivery. The company’s latest results showed stronger earnings, higher revenue, and better margins, while investors continued to track its role in cloud computing, AI infrastructure, retail, advertising, and logistics.
Amazon reported Q1 2026 earnings per share of $2.78, compared with the consensus estimate of $1.63. That marked a beat of about 70%. Revenue reached $181.52 billion, rising 16.6% from the same period last year.
The company also reported a net margin of 12.22%. This showed better cost control across its major business lines. Retail efficiency, cloud margins, and advertising growth helped support the stronger result.
Still, some investors remain careful about the pace of the stock rally. One cautious market view says, “The earnings beat was strong, but the stock may need a pause after its recent surge.” Amazon shares have climbed more than 16% so far in 2026 and nearly 29% over the past year.
Amazon Web Services remained the main profit driver for the company. AWS net sales rose 28% in Q1 2026, marking its best growth rate in more than three years.
Demand came from enterprise clients using more cloud tools, storage, and AI computing services. AWS continues to support Amazon’s profit base, even though it makes up a smaller share of total company revenue than retail.
Amazon is also building more of its AI stack in-house. The company has developed proprietary chips for AWS and offers cloud tools such as Amazon Bedrock, which helps companies build AI applications and agents.
However, the large capital spending plan has drawn questions. Amazon expects about $200 billion in capital spending in 2026. A cautious view says, “The spending may support future revenue, but it could pressure free cash flow in the near term.”
Amazon is also expanding Amazon Now, its ultra-fast delivery service. The service promises delivery in 30 minutes or less in selected markets.
The company has expanded the service to more US cities, including Minneapolis, Orlando, and Phoenix, after earlier pilots in Seattle and Philadelphia. The service covers daily items such as groceries, baby products, electronics, and alcohol where allowed.
Prime members pay a $3.99 delivery fee, while non-Prime users pay $13.99. This pricing keeps Prime at the center of Amazon’s retail strategy and gives members another reason to stay in the program.
However, the service adds another cost test for Amazon. A cautious view says, “Fast delivery can support customer loyalty, but it also raises pressure on logistics costs.”
Amazon recently traded near $271, giving it a market value of about $2.88 trillion. Its all-time high stands near $273.88, reached on April 30, 2026.
A move above that level could place the stock closer to the $3 trillion mark. MarketBeat data shows analysts hold a ‘Moderate Buy’ rating on Amazon, with an average price target of $312.52.
The stock also carries risks. Its beta of 1.59 means it can move more sharply than the wider market. Regulatory pressure, high capital spending, and valuation concerns remain key issues for investors.
Amazon’s next earnings report is scheduled for July 30, 2026. Until then, investors will watch AWS growth, delivery costs, AI spending, and the stock’s attempt to move closer to the $3 trillion level.
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