Amazon’s inventory value had already been dropping in after-hours buying and selling on Thursday regardless of better-than-expected outcomes when Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak prefaced his questions on an earnings name with a disclaimer that made it clear this wasn’t going to be a “Congrats on the quarter, guys” sort of analyst—CEO interplay.
“I’ve two [questions] for you on AWS; they’re just a little powerful however I’m going to throw them at you,” Nowak informed Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. “There’s a Wall Avenue finance individual narrative proper now that AWS is falling behind in Gen AI with issues about share loss to friends. What’s your rebuttal to that and speak to us about your and the staff’s most vital focal factors simply to make sure that AWS stays on the knife’s fringe of innovation versus hyperscaler friends?”
Nowak additionally pressed Jassy on why it wouldn’t be truthful to imagine that AWS’ income development shouldn’t speed up within the again half of the 12 months given all of AWS’ generative AI choices and widespread demand from corporations of all sizes to money in on this transformational know-how.
Jassy responded by stressing that that is the early phases of a technological transformation that can lengthen far into the longer term. Whereas among the high frontier mannequin suppliers do use AWS in some capability, non-AI AWS prospects which are speeding to construct generative and agentic AI providers utilizing AWS are “fairly early, and lots of of them are simply smaller by way of utilization relative to a few of these high heavy purposes I discussed earlier.” That’s sure to vary.
So for those who comply with Jassy’s pondering, as extra enterprises determine what they need to construct and the way they need to construct it, they’re going to begin having completely different wants. For the most important mannequin makers, like Open AI or Anthropic, Jassy foresees their prices shifting from a mixture between coaching their fashions and the price related to “inference,” or the customer-facing half the place the mannequin spits out a prediction, reply or motion, to largely inference bills. And Jassy maintains AWS is positioned effectively for this transition due to the low-cost AI chip line Trainium.
“It’s about 30% and 40% higher value efficiency than the opposite GPU suppliers on the market proper now, and we’re already engaged on our third model,” he stated.
For others, who need to use one other firm’s mannequin to create their very own generative AI purposes, Jassy argued that Amazon Bedrock, which provides fashions from a big selection of corporations, has turn out to be a go-to vacation spot and “is rising very considerably.”
Jassy continued on the this-is-just-the-first-inning thread, by noting that corporations are simply beginning to consider deploying AI brokers and that, with its current agentic AI bulletins, AWS can be well-positioned to capitalize.
The Amazon CEO, and former AWS chief, added that AWS cloud management place additionally gives some lock-in as AI “inference” turns into simply one other element of an organization’s cloud providers stack.
“[P]eople are going to really need to run these [AI] purposes near the place their different purposes are working, the place their information is,” Jassy stated. “There’s simply so many extra purposes and information working in AWS than wherever else.”
As for Nowak’s query about the potential for AWS’ development fee accelerating within the again half of the 12 months, Jassy wouldn’t straight reply it however confused his optimism, partially stemming from AWS prospects beginning to deploy extra AI merchandise at scale that ought to proceed to ramp in coming quarters.
Earlier within the name, Jassy had defended AWS’ 18% income development fee in mild of Microsoft reporting 34% annual income development for its Azure cloud unit and Alphabet just lately reporting 32% quarterly development for Google Cloud. Azure generates round 2/3 the income that AWS does, whereas Google Cloud registers lower than half the annual income of Amazon’s cloud behemoth.
“You have a look at the enterprise, it’s a $123 billion annual income run fee enterprise and it’s nonetheless early,” he stated. “How typically do you might have a possibility that’s $123 billion in annual income run fee the place you say it’s nonetheless early? It’s a really uncommon alternative that we’ve very bullish about.”












