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Jeff Bezos Dumps $5.7B in Amazon Shares—Just Before Earnings Drop

Jeff Bezos Dumps $5.7B in Amazon Shares—Just Before Earnings Drop

Published:
2025-07-26 11:40:28
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Jeff Bezos offloads $5.7 billion in Amazon stock ahead of earnings

Bezos times his exit like a Swiss watch—right before the quarterly numbers hit. Classic.

Amazon's founder unloads a mountain of stock, leaving retail investors to guess whether he's diversifying or dodging. The $5.7 billion sell-off sparks whispers: Does he know something the SEC doesn't?

Meanwhile, Wall Street analysts scramble to spin this as 'portfolio rebalancing'—because billionaires never cash out at the top, right?

Earnings loom as AI spending ramps up

Amazon reports earnings on July 31. Analysts expect $1.32 per share on $162 billion in revenue, up 4% and 9% respectively from last year’s Q2. That’s still behind the average for the so-called Magnificent Seven, which is clocking in at 15% growth on earnings and 12% on revenue. Meta, Microsoft, and Nvidia are leading the S&P 500 for 2025, while Apple’s falling behind, mostly over doubts around its AI strategy.

The pressure is heavy on Amazon to prove that its AI spending spree is worth it. Brian Recht, a portfolio manager at Janus Henderson, said, “The stock isn’t getting much credit for AI. Investors want to see whether Amazon can actually deliver on using it for improved profitability, but we think evidence of AI benefits will become more clear by the quarter.”

Amazon plans to drop $104 billion on capital expenditures this year, the most in the S&P 500. That money covers everything from new data centers to warehouses. Just last month, Amazon committed $30 billion to data center builds in Pennsylvania and North Carolina.

The company also announced layoffs in its cloud computing division, blaming the need to “optimize resources.” CEO Andy Jassy says more cuts are likely over the next few years as AI takes on more work.

Retail, robotics, and more inside the AI play

Most of the AI buzz centers on Amazon Web Services, which is expected to benefit from surging demand. But Jeff’s company isn’t just looking at AI in the cloud. It’s also trying to use it to boost the retail and logistics side. Amazon’s e-commerce business still brings in the most cash, but it’s getting squeezed by rising tariffs.

AI is being used to personalize ads, recommend products, and speed up warehouse and delivery work. Amazon has even been pushing its new Rufus chatbot, which helps customers sift through products and reviews.

On the warehouse floor, the company is training humanoid robots to handle logistics using an indoor obstacle course, as reported by The Information. The plan is to eventually automate large parts of the delivery process.

If it works, it could be big. Bank of America thinks this could save more than $7 billion a year by 2032. Morgan Stanley analysts say Amazon’s retail unit could become “the most under-appreciated GenAI beneficiary in the tech space.”

Irene Tunkel, chief U.S. equities strategist at BCA Research, added, “Retail margins are narrow, so Amazon needs all the productivity boosts it can get, and there are huge use cases for AI and robotics within warehouses. This is something that will play out over five or 10 years, but Amazon is at the forefront of it, and that definitely gives them an edge.”

Jeff still owns about 884 million Amazon shares, more than 8% of the company. That stake makes up most of his $252.3 billion net worth and keeps him ranked third-richest in the world. He also gave away about $190 million in stock to nonprofits this year.

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