Amazon Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis
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**ALEX:** Welcome back to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we cut through the noise to bring you what really matters from corporate America's latest results. I'm Alex, and joining me as always is Jordan. Today we're diving into Amazon's blockbuster Q1 2026 earnings that just dropped, and folks, this was a quarter that reminded everyone why AMZN remains one of the most closely watched stocks in the market.
Before we jump in, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
Jordan, Amazon just posted some absolutely staggering numbers. Walk us through the headline figures.
**JORDAN:** Alex, these results were genuinely impressive across the board. Amazon delivered $181.5 billion in revenue, up 17% year-over-year, or 15% excluding foreign exchange impacts. But here's the kicker - operating income hit $23.9 billion with a 13.1% operating margin. Andy Jassy specifically called this their highest operating margin ever.
**ALEX:** That margin number really jumps out. For a company of Amazon's scale to be hitting record profitability while still growing at this pace is remarkable. But the real story here seems to be AWS, right?
**JORDAN:** Absolutely. AWS was the star of the show. Revenue hit $37.6 billion with 28% year-over-year growth - that's the fastest growth rate AWS has seen in 15 quarters. And get this - Jassy said it's very unusual for a business to grow this fast on a $150 billion annualized run rate. The last time they saw growth at this clip, AWS was roughly half the size.
**ALEX:** The AI story is clearly driving a lot of this growth. What stood out to you from their AI commentary?
**JORDAN:** The AI numbers are just mind-blowing when you put them in context. Jassy mentioned that three years after AWS launched, it had a $58 million revenue run rate. But in the first three years of this AI wave, AWS's AI revenue run rate is over $15 billion - that's 260 times larger. He said they've never seen a technology grow as rapidly as AI.
**ALEX:** And they're not just riding the wave - they're building their own chips to compete. Tell us about their custom silicon story.
**JORDAN:** This might be the most underappreciated part of Amazon's business right now. Their chips business saw nearly 40% quarter-over-quarter growth, with an annual revenue run rate now over $20 billion. But here's the fascinating part - Jassy said if their chips business sold chips like other leading chip companies do, their annual revenue run rate would be $50 billion. He believes they're now one of the top three data center chip businesses in the world.
**ALEX:** That's incredible positioning, especially when you consider the supply constraints everyone's dealing with. Speaking of which, how are they handling the memory and component cost inflation that's hitting everyone right now?
**JORDAN:** Jassy was pretty candid about this challenge. He said component costs, particularly memory, have "skyrocketed" due to insufficient capacity for the demand. But interestingly, he sees this as actually helping AWS win more enterprise customers. Since cloud providers are getting priority from suppliers, companies with on-premises infrastructure are being pushed to migrate to the cloud faster because AWS has more supply than they can get on their own.
**ALEX:** That's a fascinating competitive dynamic. Now, outside of AWS, how did the core retail business perform?
**JORDAN:** The retail side showed impressive momentum too. Units grew 15% year-over-year - Jassy said that's the highest they've seen since the tail end of COVID lockdowns. Their grocery business is now generating more than $150 billion in gross sales, making them the second-largest grocer in the U.S.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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