Home Finance Tips Amazon stock is trading cheaply on 1 valuation metric after broader stock market rout

Amazon stock is trading cheaply on 1 valuation metric after broader stock market rout

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Amazon stock is trading cheaply on 1 valuation metric after broader stock market rout


The last time Amazon’s stock (AMZN) looked this cheap on a price-to-earnings multiple basis, CEO Andy Jassy was still a relative newcomer to the seat.

Shares of the e-commerce and cloud computing giant are trading on a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of 30 times, their lowest P/E in three years, according to data from FinChat. While that’s cheap for Amazon, it’s not the cheapest on a relative basis to other “Magnificent Seven” stalwarts.

That distinguished honor goes to fellow cloud competitor Microsoft (MSFT), whose stock trades on a forward price-to-earnings multiple of 18.9 times.

Lower valuations for these top tech names come amid a broader rout in markets as traders digest the potential for a recession under tariff-wielding president Trump.

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) slumped 890 points, or about 2.1% on Monday. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell by 2.7%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) shed 4%.

All three major indexes are off by more than 5% in the past month, with the Nasdaq Composite leading the way with an 11% plunge. Amazon shares have tanked 16.5% in the last month.

“After a historical bull market led by the AI Revolution over the past two years we are now seeing major investor worries as the Trump tariff news, perceived recession fears, and tech growth concerns have sent tech investors for the exits and heading for the hills,” Wedbush tech analyst Dan Ives said.

Not helping sentiment on Amazon (and to a lesser extent, Microsoft) is a mixed fourth quarter that stoked concerns about near-term demand for Amazon Web Services (AWS).

AWS sales cooled a touch to a 19% year-over-year growth rate. This result was consistent with cloud growth slowdowns at Microsoft and the like.

Amazon guided to first quarter revenue of between $151 billion and $155 billion. Analysts were anticipating $158 billion; the miss was partially due to a $2.1 billion expected hit from currency fluctuations.

“Our discussions w/investors suggest the quarter & outlook were not thesis-changing for the well-owned name, but there are incremental concerns around the trajectory of AWS growth, & to a lesser degree the macro impact on Stores,” JPMorgan analyst Doug Anmuth wrote in a client note.

It remains to be seen if investors view Amazon’s stock as cheap enough at current valuation levels given economic growth fears. But it’s worth nothing the Street hasn’t lost confidence in Amazon, at least not yet.



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