These Must-See Quotes From Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Are Great News For Nvidia

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After a couple strong years of gains, artificial intelligence tech stocks have seen volatility over the past summer and into third quarter earnings season.

After strong gains in 2023 and into the first half of 2024, concerns arose this past summer over two issues. One, cloud computing giants began greatly increasing their capital expenditures on data centers. That led investors to ask one, would there be a payoff for all that spending? That first concern led to a second concern; if these investments didn't pay off soon, did that make AI a hype-driven bubble set to burst?

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Fortunately, the largest cloud platform in the world, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) just reported strong earnings last Thursday, the details of which should greatly reassure AI investors everywhere, especially those concerned about the near-term outlook for AI chip leader Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).

Amazon Web Services posts eye-opening growth

Some investors had come to doubt Amazon Web Services (AWS), the largest cloud computing infrastructure provider in the world, over the past few years, after its growth decelerated in 2022 and 2023. However, it appears AI is heating up AWS's growth prospects again.

In the third quarter, AWS revenue surged 19%, marking an acceleration over the prior year's 12% growth, defying the law of large numbers. Not only was revenue growth robust, but cloud computing operating margins expanded from 30.3% a year ago to 38.1%, with AWS's operating income surging an even more impressive 50%. While AWS operating margins can bounce around a lot, the general trend is quite positive. On a trailing 12-month basis, AWS's operating margins expanded almost 10 percentage points, from 25.8% a year ago to 35.3%, which is a massive jump.

That means AI isn't just providing strong growth for Amazon, but profitable growth. That last piece is really important, as virtually all big cloud companies are significantly expanding their investments in AI data centers. For Amazon specifically, its capital expenditures on property, plant, and equipment rose 81% to $21.2 billion last quarter. Therefore, to see all that spending pay off in terms of growth and margin in the near-term was a relief.

"Three times faster than cloud at this stage"

One of the more eye-opening quotations from last Thursday's conference call with analysts was Amazon CEO Andy Jassy giving very positive color around the AI-specific part of AWS. He noted, "AWS's AI business is a multibillion-dollar revenue run rate business that continues to grow at a triple-digit year-over-year percentage, and is growing more than three times faster at this stage of its evolution as AWS itself grew -- and we felt like AWS grew pretty quickly."