Wall Street is Talking About These 10 AI Stocks Now

2. Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN)

Number of Hedge Fund Investors: 308

Commenting about Amazon in a latest program on CNBC, Jim Cramer said:

“If you go through the FedEx lines you’ll see that ecommerce is stronger than they thought, stronger. That means it’s very well for Amazon… I really like it.”

AWS’s revenue growth accelerated from 17.2% in Q1 to 18.8% in Q2, driven by a shift from on-premises infrastructure to cloud solutions and increasing demand for AI capabilities. Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) advertising segment added over $2 billion in revenue year-over-year, indicating significant potential in video advertising and opportunities within Prime Video offerings.

Like other tech companies, fears stemming from high CapEX are keeping investors on the sidelines. Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) spending is expected to rise amid broadband project Project Kuiper and AI growth. Investors are still figuring out whether AI monetization and ROI will come anytime soon. Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) is also facing a slowdown in consumer spending, especially for higher-ticket items like electronics and computers.

Based on Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) Q3 guidance, its revenue growth would be 11%. The stock is trading 35x its fiscal 2025 earnings estimates set by Wall Street. This shows the stock is fairly priced and investors looking for strong growth could look elsewhere.

Hayden Capital stated the following regarding Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) in its Q2 2024 investor letter:

“Our portfolio is still recovering from the 2022 downturn, although we’ve made meaningful progress in the last two years. While that experience has taught us many lessons, that dislocation also provided a rich vein of opportunities that we continue to mine today

Some of our biggest winners in the last two years, have been “re-acceleration” stories. These are cases where once rapidly growing companies suddenly put the brakes on during a weak economy. There could be several reasons for this – customers pulling back during a recession, the company proactively curtailing growth spend as a precaution, needing to cut costs & right-size the business to become profitable quickly, or many other reasons.

But the commonality seems to be that as soon as growth stops, the market narrative turns suddenly from positive, to “this company is finished”. They go from being valued for many years of rapid growth, to being priced like a mature company that will never realize significant growth again. But often neither scenario is true, with the ultimate future path somewhere in between.

I find the fact this type of opportunity even exists, fascinating. Especially since it seems to happen every bear-market – perhaps indicating it’s embedded in human nature (and thus persistent & likely minable throughout one’s investing career). For example, I gave the examples of Amazon.com, Inc.’s (NASDAQ:AMZN) stock performance in our Q1 2022 letter (please re-read this piece for more context; LINK)…” (Click here to read the full text)