Amazon (AMZN): Three Profit Engines, One Capex Supercycle
For 'should I invest in Amazon?' — AWS reaccelerating on AI, advertising quietly becoming a margin machine, retail finally profitable, and a $100B+ capex bill stitched through all of it.
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Amazon's earnings power now rests on three engines with different economics: AWS (~$120B annualized in the modeled series, growing ~20% with AI workloads reaccelerating it), advertising (~$65B annualized, growing ~18% at software-like margins), and a North American retail operation whose margins turned structurally positive after the 2022–2023 cost reset. Against them sits the largest capex program in the company's history — $100B+ annually for AI data centers, custom Trainium silicon, and logistics — which suppresses near-term free cash flow. The analytical question is whether the two high-margin engines compound faster than the capex bill grows. The Narraitive provides analysis, not investment advice, and makes no buy/sell/hold recommendation.
TL;DR
Retail pays the rent, advertising prints margin, AWS carries the growth story, and a $100B+ capex program eats the free cash flow that would otherwise prove the thesis. The three-engine structure is the analysis; what to do with it is yours. No investment advice here.
Key facts
- AWS runs at a modeled ~$120B annualized pace, growing ~20% with AI demand the reacceleration driver.
- Advertising runs at a modeled ~$65B annualized pace — high-margin revenue layered on existing traffic.
- North American retail operating margin turned and held structurally positive (~6%+ modeled) after the 2022–2023 cost reset.
- Modeled capex exceeds $100B annually — data centers, Trainium custom silicon, and logistics.
- Amazon is both Nvidia's customer and competitor via Trainium — a hedge most peers lack.
Key metrics
AWS run-rate (mod.)
~$120B
+20% YoY
Ads run-rate (mod.)
~$65B
+18% YoY
NA retail margin
~6%
structurally positive
Capex (mod.)
$100B+
annualized
Main thesis
Our interpretation: Amazon has quietly become a margin-mix story — every year, a larger share of gross profit comes from AWS and ads rather than retail, lifting the floor under consolidated margins. The capex supercycle delays the payoff's visibility in free cash flow, which is exactly when mix improvements get mispriced. The risk is symmetric: if AI demand disappoints, Amazon holds the depreciation with less software margin to hide it. Structure, not stock advice.
Engine one: AWS, reaccelerated by AI
AWS decelerated through the 2022–2023 optimization cycle, then reaccelerated as AI workloads arrived: training and inference consumption, Bedrock's model marketplace, and Anthropic's training commitment among them. The modeled series holds growth near 20% on a ~$120B base.
Amazon's structural hedge is Trainium: custom silicon that serves internal and customer AI demand at lower cost than merchant GPUs. It makes Amazon partially independent of — and partially competitive with — its largest supplier.
Engine two: the advertising business hiding in the store
Amazon's ads business — sponsored listings, Prime Video ads, DSP — runs at a modeled ~$65B annualized pace. Its economics are the point: the traffic already exists, so incremental ad revenue arrives at margins retail could never produce.
It is now the third-largest digital-ads business globally and the least discussed of Amazon's engines relative to its profit contribution.
The two smaller bars produce the majority of profit growth.
The capex bill that blurs the picture
Modeled capex above $100B annually makes Amazon the single largest spender in the hyperscaler buildout we track in our capex briefing. Free cash flow — the metric that re-rated the stock in 2023–2024 — compresses while the build runs, and depreciation steps up on schedule afterward.
The bull frame: Amazon has run exactly this movie before, building logistics ahead of demand in 2015-2018 and AWS ahead of cloud adoption before that. The bear frame: this build's payback depends on AI demand curves no one has verified at scale.
FCF compresses while the build runs — the same pattern as the logistics buildout.
What to watch next
AWS growth and backlog disclosures, advertising growth against retail traffic, North American margin trajectory, capex guidance, and Trainium adoption milestones — all refreshed on this briefing's schedule.
| Item | Direction | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| AWS growth + backlog | Both | The engine the multiple is attached to |
| Ads growth vs retail traffic | Bull | Highest-quality incremental margin |
| Capex guidance inflections | Both | Sets the FCF trajectory |
| Trainium adoption | Bull | Reduces dependence on merchant GPU pricing |
| Consumer spending cycles | Bear | Retail remains the revenue base |
Source: The Narraitive analysis (illustrative preview data)
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Methodology
Segment series are The Narraitive-modeled approximations of public disclosures; advertising and AWS run-rates annualize the latest reported quarters. Preview note: figures are illustrative preview data regenerated by The Narraitive's refresh pipeline; live data replaces them at launch. Nothing here is investment advice.
Data sources
- Amazon quarterly disclosures (public filings)
- Company capex and AWS commentary from earnings calls
- Public digital-advertising market data
Data freshness
Published Jun 10, 2026. Narrative last updated Jun 10, 2026. Underlying data last refreshed Jun 11, 2026 by the automated pipeline; charts and tables on this page render from those artifacts. If a refresh fails, the previous good data remains live.
What changed since last refresh
- Jun 10: Briefing published — The Narraitive company series.
Risks and limitations
- Retail revenue mixes first-party and third-party flows; comparisons across years are approximate.
- FCF is sensitive to working-capital timing the modeled series smooths over.
- AI-demand assumptions underpin both the AWS and capex trajectories.
Frequently asked questions
- Should I invest in Amazon (AMZN)?
- The Narraitive does not provide investment advice or buy/sell/hold recommendations. Factors investors weigh: three compounding engines (AWS ~20% growth, ads ~18% at high margins, structurally profitable retail) and a credible history of capex cycles paying off — against $100B+ annual capex compressing free cash flow, AI-demand dependence, and retail's consumer-cycle exposure. Evaluate with your own circumstances or a licensed adviser.
- What's the latest news with Amazon?
- As of this June 2026 refresh: AWS growth holds near 20% with AI workloads driving reacceleration; advertising compounds toward a modeled ~$75B 2026 pace; and the capex program — data centers, Trainium silicon, logistics — runs above $100B annualized. Living briefing — check the refresh date above.
- Is AWS still growing?
- Yes — modeled at roughly 19–20% annually on a ~$120B+ base, having reaccelerated from the 2023 optimization trough (~13%) as AI training and inference workloads scaled.
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