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A Tale Of Two Catalysts

parislemon:

Amazon will announce their earnings later today. As I outlined in October, the results this past quarter will highlight the difference between Apple and Amazon.

Writes Tricia Duryee:

Here’s one data point: For the holiday period, Apple’s gross margin was an impressive 44.7 percent, up from 38.5 percent a year earlier. Meanwhile, analysts are estimating that Amazon’s operating margin will fall to 1.3 percent from 3.6 percent last year.

44.7 percent versus 1.3 percent. 

What does that mean? It means that even though Amazon should report record revenues, their profit will likely be depressed — probably badly depressed. Why? Well, first and foremost, most of the goods they sell have low margins. But even the goods that should have high margins — hardware — have low margins. 

Or worse. Take the Kindle Fire — Amazon’s most popular product (though don’t bother asking how many they actually sold) — it’s sold at a loss

Like Apple, Amazon has built an amazing business that has revolutionized more than one industry. But context is important. Right now, Apple probably makes more profit in a day than Amazon does in a quarter. 

Why Apple rules and Amazon not quite

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  9. martinvarsavsky reblogged this from parislemon and added:
    Why Apple rules and Amazon not quite
  10. msarp reblogged this from parislemon and added:
    Because they’re selling things like
  11. afgurri reblogged this from parislemon and added:
    Because they’re selling things like...Which means, by the way, that all the extra value...
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