These costs may approach US$4 billion through the 4Q21 holiday season as Amazon ramps up staffing by 150,000 and opens access to new ports and container capacity.
“Higher costs are expected to dampen growth for the next quarter. We also worry the higher cost may linger into the following quarters as the US labour shortage may persist and higher wages take a permanent nature,” says Ang.
Meanwhile, the revenue of Amazon’s cloud computing business Amazon Web Services jumped 39% y-o-y to US$16.1 billion in 3Q21, the strongest growth in the last eight quarters.
Ang notes that the industries whose spending was suppressed by the pandemic are recovering and accelerating their use of the cloud.
See also: UOBKH says ‘size matters’ on ‘overweight’ data centre REITs, but downgrades MINT to ‘hold’
Amazon’s advertising revenue grew 50% y-o-y to US$8.1 billion, on track to reach PhillipCapital’s FY21E target. The supply chain pressures have not impacted advertisement demand, says Ang.
For more stories about where the money flows, click here for our Capital section
The analyst has revised his target price to US$4,157, down from the previous US$4,329. The valuations are based on discounted cash flow, with a weighted average cost of capital of 6.2% and terminal growth of 5%.
As of yesterday’s close, Amazon ended 0.16% lower at US$3,312.75.