Amazon sales rise more than £3.5bn

Amazon announced a sales rise of more than £3.5bn in its latest financial results, but share prices slumped as the firm missed investor expectations.
Jeff Bezos founder and CEO of Amazon.  (AP)Jeff Bezos founder and CEO of Amazon.  (AP)
Jeff Bezos founder and CEO of Amazon. (AP)

The technology and e-commerce giant announced the revenue increase for the final three months of 2015 to £26.1bn, up from just over £20.1bn in 2014. The three-month time-frame includes the crucial Christmas period, always an important time for the online retailer.

But despite figures for the year that showed a 71 per cent rise in revenue and 186 per cent rise in profit, the results missed the expectations set by analysts and investors, and as a result share prices dropped 12 per cent in after-hours trading on the US stock market.

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Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos remained positive however, following the results.

“Twenty years ago, I was driving the packages to the post office myself and hoping we might one day afford a forklift. This year, we pass 100 billion dollars in annual sales and serve 300 million customers.

“And still, measured by the dynamism we see everywhere in the marketplace and by the ever-expanding opportunities we see to invent on behalf of customers, it feels every bit like day one.”

The firm also reported success in other areas - namely its own-brand hardware and Amazon Prime membership plan. Amazon said its Fire TV streaming devices remain the best-selling in the US, while Prime membership - which includes access to the Fire TV streaming service of films and television, as well as a music service and quicker delivery from Amazon Store - rose by 51% globally.

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Technology expert and senior managing editor at CNET, Kent German, said: “Despite Amazon reporting its third straight quarter of profits and record sales, the company missed analyst expectations by a wide mark.

“It continues to expand in new areas like cloud services, streaming entertainment and hardware, but the growing number of Amazon Prime users are presenting the company with a fulfilment problem. It hasn’t been able to recover the shipping costs it’s incurring to meet its promise of free delivery to Prime customers.

“The challenge over the next year will be to cut shipping costs without prohibitively raising the cost of Prime membership.”

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