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posted by CoolHand on Saturday April 25 2015, @06:37AM   Printer-friendly
from the nebulous-profits dept.

The New York Times reports that Amazon unveiled the financial performance of its powerful growth engine for the first time on Thursday, and the numbers looked good, energized primarily by renting processing power to start-ups and, increasingly, established businesses. Amazon said in its first-quarter earnings report that its cloud division, Amazon Web Services, had revenue of $1.57 billion during the first three months of the year. What is more unusual at a company that often reports losses, the cloud business is generating substantial profits. The company said its operating income from AWS was $265 million.

Amazon helped popularize the field starting in 2006 and largely had cloud computing to itself for years, an enormous advantage in an industry where rivals usually watch one another closely. At the moment, there is no contest: Amazon is dominant and might even be extending its lead. Microsoft ranks a distant No. 2 in cloud computing but hopes to pick up the slack with infrastructure-related services it sells through Azure, the name of its cloud service.

“Microsoft is a credible player,” says Lydia Leong. But, she added, “Amazon is the most common platform for start-ups.” Amazon executives have said they expect AWS to eventually rival the company’s other businesses in size. The cloud business has been growing at about 40 percent a year, more than twice the rate of the overall company and many Wall Street analysts have been hoping for a spinoff.

As for Google, the cloud was barely mentioned in Google's earnings call. Nor did the search giant offer any cloud numbers, making it impossible to gauge how well it is doing. But the enthusiasm of Eric Schmidt, Google’s executive chairman, was manifest when he spoke at an event for cloud software developers this week. “The entire world will be defined by smartphones, Android or Apple, a very fast network, and cloud computing,” said Schmidt. “The space is very large, very vast, and no one is covering all of it.”

 
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  • (Score: 2) by Bot on Saturday April 25 2015, @04:34PM

    by Bot (3902) on Saturday April 25 2015, @04:34PM (#175092) Journal

    You raise a very good point. What good is Amazon for investors.
    My answer is, if the investors are banks, Amazon makes perfect sense: you have it as competitor, your business falls on hard times, you become roadkill for the bank. If they are normal investors, well good luck.
    Rethinking the whole financial sector would be a nice idea, but I suspect the current system would survive a global thermonuclear war, so if it changes, it's probably to morph into a worse system.

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