Sun, Feb 26, 2012, 10:18 AM EST - U.S. Markets closed

Daily Ticker

DEAR AMERICA: It’s Time To Say A Big “Thank You” To Amazon

Amazon just reported its third quarter results.

The company missed Wall Street's estimates for both revenue and earnings and said it would have lower profit margins next quarter. This resulted in the usual spanking of Amazon's stock, as short-term profit seekers growled in disgust and raced for the exits.

In other words, with respect to Amazon, it's the same as it ever was.

Amazon is a highly unusual American corporation, for several reasons:

  • Amazon unapologetically builds its business for the long-term, without worrying about what short-term Wall Street traders think.
  • Amazon sacrifices near-term profits for long-term investments, again without worrying about what short-term traders think.
  • Amazon operates at a much lower profit margin than it could have if it were trying to "maximize near-term returns," which is what many (most) American corporations try to do.
  • Amazon is investing--and hiring--aggressively for the future, at a time when most American corporations are cutting costs, laying off workers, and hoarding humongous piles of cash.

In other words, Amazon is doing what many more American corporations could and should do: Balance the near-term "profit motive" with a more holistic mission of focusing on the long-term and serving customers, employees, shareholders, and the community at large.

The most pressing problems in the US economy right now are two-fold:

  1. Near-record-high unemployment at the same time as near record-high profit margins
  2. Income inequality that is now the highest since the late 1920s, just before the Great Depression

By balancing near-term profits with investing for the long-term, Amazon is helping to address these problems.

Amazon's profit "disappointment" this quarter was largely due to the fact that the company opened more fulfillment centers and hired more people than it expected to--8,100 people in just this quarter alone.

Amazon's projection of lower-than-expected profit margins next quarter, meanwhile, is likely the result of Amazon investing heavily in an innovative new product, the Kindle, that is revolutionizing the way media is distributed.

The Kindle "ecosystem," which did not exist four years ago, is providing jobs and opportunity for tens of thousands of people in the US and abroad. It is taking advantage of one of America's remaining strengths, technology innovation. Like Amazon itself, it is making consumer's lives better and easier and more convenient.

Amazon itself, meanwhile, did not exist 15 years ago. It exists because an entrepreneur named Jeff Bezos took the risk of quitting his super-high-paying Wall Street job, racing across the country in his Honda to Seattle, and then starting the company from scratch. And in the past 15 years, by balancing near-term profits and long-term investments, Amazon has outlived many dotcom shooting stars and become a global powerhouse with ~$50 billion of revenue that employs 50,000 and is beloved by both investors and customers alike.

Amazon is investing (and hiring) while many other American corporations are milking incumbent businesses, under-investing in research and development, and hoarding cash. To the chagrin of of some traders, Amazon is distinctly NOT "maximizing near-term profits"--it is sacrificing near-term profits. It is making less money now in the hopes of making more money and creating more value later. And it is ignoring the howls and screams of short-term traders who couldn't care less about Amazon's long-term prognosis, add nothing to the economy, and just want to make money now.

If more American companies started to do what Amazon does--ignore short-term pressures, sacrifice near-term profits, and invest for the long-term--the American economy would start to heal itself quickly. America would create more innovation, more jobs, and more long-term wealth. And, just as important, more Americans would be able to go back to being proud of our corporations and innovators and entrepreneurs... instead of camping in parks and protesting them.

SEE ALSO: CHARTS: Here's What The Protesters Are So Angry About...

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123 comments

  • PARTH V  •  4 months ago
    I love Amazon.
  • Jason  •  4 months ago
    Well said Henry.
  • ZZ  •  4 months ago
    Love Amazon
  • peacenick  •  4 months ago
    long term investing is smart, but moreover it requires a true belief that your business plan is sound and not built on a house of cards that will fold in 1-3 years.
  • cefarmer  •  4 months ago
    Thanks for the heads up, i totally agree with amazon wa;y of looking and doing business.. thanks for the good writing....
  • FrontRange  •  4 months ago
    What a great commentary. Thanks for sharing the insight, the praise for Amazon, and wagging your finger at the guilty parties.
  • Bruce  •  4 months ago
    excellent article. amazon is a long term buy, no doubt.
  • jim hankland  •  4 months ago
    Amazon is the biggest job killer in the US today and this will continue until Congress fixes the tax code that Amazon keeps hiding behind. Amazon claims that they can't calculate tax correctly if the Internet tax law is enacted. Do they use an abacus to do their accounting? Total #$%$Companies doing billions and billions of dollars of revenue a year have disappeared in large part to this "no tax" fallacy (which by the way...you are legally supposed to pay tax through a sales and use form). Think I'm crazy? Look at the numbers. Brick and mortars hire 5X the employees per dollar of revenue that Amazon does. FULL DISCLOSURE: I use Amazon for books, CDs, etc. so I like Amazon as a resource for things I want to buy. It is their unfair tax strategy that is the problem. With that said, if you open your eyes, do the math and see what damage Amazon has caused to our business environment, you'll realize what I am talking about. Wake up before your job is gone.
  • yahoo user  •  4 months ago
    My husband dropped his KINDLE from the overhead compartment on the airplane,it went blank.
    He was so upset that he called AMAZON right away when he came back in order to get a new one but they sent him a new one within 3 days by charging him only A SMALL FEE.
    Thanks, Jeff Beso, I always like ur service,it just proved I was right to use AMAZON to buy books, cd,dvd,vacume cleaner,electronic massager,diaper.....
  • Paula  •  4 months ago
    And the government wants Amazon to collect taxes on purchases from their site. The government doing what the government does best - ruin and regulate corporate American to extinction. Look what happened when Amazon stood up to them and said NO, they were able to hire more people and continue with the type of business they want to run.
  • ScottT  •  4 months ago
    Best article I have read on yahoo finance in a long long time. Every year we buy our holiday books and media gifts on Amazon and they will continue to get our business. That is if I can ever get my wife to get off her kindle so we can discuss what we are getting for everyone. Bravo to Jeff Bezos and Amazon.
  • R  •  4 months ago
    OK Henry I will say thank you to Amazon. But I just checked and I am not buying their stock. No dividend and 65 times forward earnings. Why is that a good investment? I buy from them all the time.
  • kevin  •  4 months ago
    retire now henry - you can't produce a more concise well-reasoned piece than this - was a pleasure to read
  • Guy  •  4 months ago
    Great points! Thanks for expressing this - and for pointing out how great companies are not slaves to quarterly profits and Wall Street expectations but invest for the long term.
  • Thomas  •  4 months ago
    Amazon is also unusual, in that most retailers have to include a sales tax. It gives them quite an advantage over buying locally.
  • Jeremy  •  4 months ago
    Hear hear. Unfortunately, this is going to be a rarity from here on out, thanks to daytrading and the idea that the only reason the stock market exists is for people to get rich quick by shuffling stocks around
  • Pepper  •  4 months ago
    Amazon is awesome, I even have the rewards card...
  • Justin  •  4 months ago
    It's easy for the CEO to only focus on the long term when they have $20B. The incentives at other companies will dictate different behavior.

    We wouldn't want to give most CEOs the leeway that Bezos has to focus on the long term and just say 'trust me' to the market. Amazon is a great story (I used to work there and loved it) and demonstrates the benefits of a founder led company, but it's not a great model for the average fortune 500 company.
  • hjp  •  4 months ago
    Thank you Henry Blodget for pointing out that "American corporations could and should balance the near-term 'profit motive' with a more holistic mission of focusing on the long-term and serving customers, employees, shareholders, and the community at large" and "American corporations are milking incumbent businesses, under-investing in research and development, and hoarding cash". Board of Directors should be personally responsible for ensuring that public corporations achieve these goals and are not raided by their CEO's and top executives. Corporations have neglected long term growth and profitability to enhance their current pay. This is a breach of fiduciary duty and should be looked at by the SEC so that LONG TERM investors and pension plans are also protected.
  • theworldisnotenough  •  4 months ago
    Oh goodness it is Henry "Companies need to build a middle class like they used to" Blodget running the same game... Keep #$%$%^& that chicken Henry!I would expect you to understand that "cash hoarding" is done for a reason. It is the cause not the effect. Maybe you should write more op eds on cause.Stop it Henry this is foolish.

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