News

Asian stocks follow US higher after tech earnings buoy sentiment

Amazon reported better than expected sales and profits in the March quarter despite persistent inflation and a weakening economic environment that analysts had feared would result in softer spending among consumers and enterprise cloud customers.

Revenues grew 9 per cent to $127.4bn, ahead of forecasts of $124.6bn, according to S&P Capital IQ. Sales at Amazon’s online stores were flat at $51.1bn, but topped forecasts of $50.4bn.

Revenue at Amazon Web Services, its cloud unit, grew 16 per cent to $21.4bn, ahead of forecasts for $21.2bn. Amazon chief executive Andy Jassy said AWS customers were “spending more cautiously,” but added: “We like the fundamentals we’re seeing in AWS, and believe there’s much growth ahead.”

Read more on Amazon here.

Articles You May Like

Biden finally breaks silence on congressional stock trading: ‘I don’t know how you look your constituents in the eye’
Cyber event cited in Palomar Health ratings falling further into junk territory
Economics can’t explain all the anger of voters
The Syrian neighbourhood at the heart of Assad’s killing machine
Wall Street’s fear gauge — the VIX — saw second-biggest spike ever on Wednesday