Showing posts with label Amazon Web Services. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon Web Services. Show all posts

Monday, September 25, 2017

If Amazon Takes Over The World...

Authored by Scott Galloway op-ed via The Wall Street Journal,


Four tech giants - Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google - have added $2 trillion to their combined market capitalization since the 2007-09 recession, a sum that approaches the GDP of India. The concentrated wealth and power of these companies has alarmed many observers, who see their growth as a threat not just to consumers and other businesses but to American society itself.


After spending most of the past decade researching these companies, I’ve come to the conclusion that our fears are misplaced in focusing on what I call the Four. We should instead be worrying about the One: one firm that will come to dominate search, hardware and cloud computing, that will control a vast network of far-flung businesses, that can ravage entire sectors of the economy simply by announcing its interest in them.



That firm is Amazon. Jeff Bezos has been disciplined and single-minded in his vision of investing in the most enduring consumer wants—price, convenience and selection. Coupled with deft execution, it has made Amazon the most impressive and feared firm in business.


As for the other three, don’t be misled by their current successes. They are falling behind as the One marches ahead.


Google seems to have a commanding market position when it comes to search functions. As European Union regulators pointed out in their recent antitrust finding, Google has an astonishing 90% share in the category in Europe. Its share in the U.S. is 64%. But it’s a very different story in the narrower, and more lucrative, domain of product search. In 2015, more product searches in the U.S. began on Amazon than on search engines, including Google (44% vs. 34%), according to BloomReach. A year later, Amazon’s share grew to 55%. Amazon could reasonably be described as a search engine with a warehouse attached to it.


For years, Apple has been the undisputed king of hardware innovation. But the prize for the most disruptive recent device goes to the hands-free, voice-controlled Amazon Echo speaker and its buttery voice, Alexa. Research firm Gartner predicts that 30% of computing will be screenless by 2020. So far, Apple looks to have blown an early lead in the great voice race: With 700 million iPhones in use world-wide, Apple’s Siri still has the most share in voice overall. But Amazon’s share of voice on home devices—the next frontier—is 70%.


Today’s fastest-growing sector in tech is cloud computing. There are several big players in the field, including old and new tech: IBM , Microsoft , Google. The dominant player again is Amazon, with a business launched originally to support its internal computing needs. According to Synergy Research Group, Amazon’s cloud offering (called Amazon Web Services) enjoys more than 30% of the market, triple the share of the No. 2, Microsoft’s Azure, and will register $16 billion in revenue in 2017. Financial pundits, looking for something negative to say about Amazon’s recent quarterly earnings, highlighted that growth in the company’s cloud business had slowed to 43%. “Slowed to 43%” is not a phrase you read in any other equity analyst’s write-up of a large company in 2017.


Amazon’s consistent outperformance of the other three tech giants is distinct from its continued dominance of old-economy firms. With the acquisition of Whole Foods, Amazon will likely become the fastest-growing online and bricks-and-mortar retailer. The whole grocery sector—with $612 billion in U.S. sales in 2016—has been disrupted overnight by Amazon. In the months between the announcement and closing of Amazon’s acquisition of Whole Foods this year, the largest pure-play grocer, Kroger , lost nearly a third of its market value.


The late business professor C.K. Prahalad of the University of Michigan famously argued that the most successful firms focus not on one market but on one “core competence.” Amazon has proved otherwise. What Amazon has accomplished across industries is unprecedented, even among the most successful businesses. Nike does not have a cloud business; Starbucks is not developing original TV content; Wal-Mart has not filed patents for warehouses in the sky. Amazon has recently been granted patents for a floating warehouse and small drones that can self-assemble into bigger drones capable of transporting larger packages, reflecting the ability, one day, to operate intricate networks of fulfillment by air. Other firms are punished for straying from their familiar areas of strength; Amazon sucks value from sectors in which it has had no previous involvement just by glancing at them.


At New York University’s business school, where I teach, I have for years kept a close watch on which firms are winning the competition for the most talented students. A decade ago, the top recruiter was American Express , with investment banks vying for second position. Now the clear winner is Amazon: 12 students from my most recent class have opted for a life of rain and overrated coffee in the Pacific Northwest.


Why does Amazon’s ascent matter? Aren’t lower prices and greater efficiencies better for everyone? They are, in all the obvious ways, but that’s not a complete picture. Amazon’s seemingly boundless growth forces us to wrestle with difficult questions about the reasons for its dominance.


For one, Amazon, unlike any other firm its size, has changed the basic compact with financial markets.


It has replaced the expectation for profits with a focus on vision and growth, managing its business to break even while investors bid up its stock price.


This radical approach has provided the company with a staggering advantage in free-flowing capital. Google, Facebook, Wal-Mart and most Fortune 500 companies are saddled with expectations of profits. Many firms would be much more innovative if they were given a license to operate without the nuisance of profitability. Amazon has thus had enormous capital on hand to invest in delivery networks, especially the crucial last link for getting goods to the doorsteps of consumers, without having to worry that they don’t yield immediate profits.


Amazon’s strategy of break-even operations also means that it has virtually no profits to tax. Since 2008, Wal-Mart has paid $64 billion in federal income taxes, while Amazon has paid just $1.4 billion. Yet, while paying low taxes, Amazon has added $220 billion in value to the stock held by its shareholders over the past 24 months—equivalent to the entire market capitalization of Wal-Mart.


Something is deeply amiss when a company can ascend to almost a half trillion dollars in market value—becoming the fifth most valuable firm in the world—without paying any meaningful income tax. Does Amazon really owe so little to support public revenue and public needs? If a giant firm pays less than the average 24% in income taxes that the companies of the S&P 500 pay, it logically means that less-successful firms pay more. In this way, Amazon further adds to the winner-take-all tendencies plaguing our economy.


Because Amazon is more efficient than other retailers, it is able to transact the same amount of business with half the employees. If Amazon continues to grow its business by $20 billion a year, the annual toll of lost jobs for merchants, buyers and cashiers will be in the tens of thousands by my calculations. Disruption in the U.S. labor force is nothing new—we have just never dealt with a company that is so ruthless and single-minded about it.


I recently spoke at a conference the day after Jeff Bezos. During his talk, he made the case for a universal guaranteed income for all Americans. It is tempting to admire his progressive values and concern for the public welfare, but there is a dark implication here too. It appears that the most insightful mind in the business world has given up on the notion that our economy, or his firm, can support that pillar of American identity: a well-paying job.


Amazon has brought us many benefits, but we all must recognize that the rise of the One brings with it much more than free two-day delivery. “Alexa, is this a good thing?”

Monday, September 18, 2017

Amazon’s Web Services Can Now Host The Government’s Most Sensitive Data


amazon


Just recently, the Defense Department granted the cloud computing giant, Amazon,  a provisional authorization to host Impact Level 5 workloads, which are the military and the Pentagon’s most sensitive, unclassified information. Amazon’s web services can now host some of the government’s most fascinating (to the public) and sensitive information.


“This further bolsters AWS (Amazon Web Services) as an industry leader in helping support the DoD’s critical mission in protecting our security,” the company said in a statement. “The AWS services support a variety of DoD (Department of Defense) workloads, including workloads containing sensitive controlled unclassified information and National Security Systems information.”


But the DoD is already using Amazon’s services and this is not exactly new news. The DoD is using AWS to host sensitive, mission-critical workloads, including the operational control system for the Global Positioning System, or GPS. The provisional authorization allows military customers an easier route to use AWS for a variety of other IT services.



In total, three commercial companies—AWS, IBM and Microsoft—are now able to host and store the military’s most sensitive unclassified data. AWS has expanded its defense business, it remains the dominant cloud service provider in the intelligence community by virtue of its $600 million contract with the Central Intelligence Agency. AWS’ C2S cloud hosts classified information for the 17 intelligence agencies.


The company’s Beltway presence continues to grow in lines with its federal market share. AWS recently announced a new corporate headquarters and up to 1,500 jobs in Fairfax County and expects a new East Coast computing region to come online in 2018. Called US-East, the region will essentially be a mass of computer networks operating by AWS entirely for government customers, including the Defense Department. – Nextgov.com



This includes, but certainly isn’t limited to top-secret Pentagon and NSA (National Security Administration) information. According to the Daily Mail, this includes workloads containing sensitive Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI), National Security Systems (NSS), and the Global Positioning System Next Generation Operational Control System (GPS OCX), a critical navigation information system that supports global cyber protection and analysis of satellite data.



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Thursday, June 29, 2017

It Begins: WalMart Warns Truckers It Will No Longer Work With Them If They Move Goods For Amazon

The cold war between America"s two largest retailers just turned hot.


In a note this morning from Deutsche Bank"s freight and logistics analyst Amit Mehrotra, he notes that  the "WMT vs. AMZN battle is heating up" and points to a report by DV Velocity, according to which a well respected transportation industry consultant told attendees of a logistics conference that Walmart (WMT) is telling trucking companies that it will no longer do business with them if they continue moving goods for Amazon (AMZN).


This follows similar reports citing WMT’s “request” for its tech partners to stop using Amazon Web Services.


The news, while suggestive perhaps of Walmart"s growing desperation in its war with the retail juggernaut that is Amazon, has dramatic implications not only for the future of retail (and associated prices) but for one of the most important US industries: trucking, and the number of people it employes.


According to Deutsche, these developments, "are likely to have significant implications for U.S. transportation companies, in our view, as Amazon and Walmart remain two of the largest users of truckload capacity. For reference Walmart represents about 14% of SWFT’s operating revenues and traditional retail accounts for about half of WERN"s total sales (WMT around 4%)."


A map of Amazon"s multiplying fulfuillment centers is shown below.



And, as CNBC reported last week, WalMart warned some tech companies that if they want Wal-Mart"s business, they can"t run applications on Amazon"s cloud platform, Amazon Web Services, some tech companies told The Wall Street Journal. Wal-Mart uses some tech vendors" cloud apps that run on AWS, Wal-Mart spokesman Dan Toporek told the Journal, though he declined to say which apps or how many. But Toporek did acknowledge instances where Wal-Mart is pushing for AWS alternatives, the Journal reported Wednesday. 


Wal-Mart spokesman Toporek told CNBC in an email: "Our vendors have the choice of using any cloud provider that meets their needs and their customers" needs. It shouldn"t be a big surprise that there are cases in which we"d prefer our most sensitive data isn"t sitting on a competitor"s platform." Wal-Mart doesn"t appear to be alone in this push to leave AWS, either.





Other large retailers are reportedly requesting that service providers move away from AWS, the Journal said, citing technology vendors that work with retailers. Adding to the many growing conflicts of interest, Amazon has confirmed a number of retailers it competes with use AWS, for example GameStop.



The battle between Wal-Mart and Amazon is only heating up, after Amazon announced plans last week to acquire brick-and-mortar grocery retailer Whole Foods. With Amazon stepping into Wal-Mart"s turf in grocery, Wal-Mart has been trying to beef up its e-commerce presence.



In light of AMZN"s recent expansion with the purchase of WFM, one can see why WMT is starting to take it much more seriously. Perhaps Amazon"s latest push (and WMT"s lobbying effort) may explain why Trump decided to finally reignite his long-simmering war with AMZN CEO Jeff Bezos, when this morning he tweeted “The #AmazonWashingtonPost, sometimes referred to as the guardian of Amazon not paying internet taxes (which they should) is FAKE NEWS!”


Friday, May 26, 2017

Visualizing How The Big 5 Tech Giants Make Their Billions

Hitting record high after record high, tech companies have displaced traditional blue chip companies like Exxon Mobil and Walmart as the most valuable companies in the world.


Here are the latest market valuations for those same five companies:



Together, they are worth $2.9 trillion in market capitalization – and they combined in FY2016 for revenues of $555 billion with a $94 billion bottom line.



BRINGING HOME THE BACON?


Despite all being at the top of the stock market food chain, Visual Capitalist"s Jeff Desjardins points out that the companies are at very different stages.


In 2016, Apple experienced its first annual revenue decline since 2001, but the company brought home a profit equal to that of all other four companies combined.


On the other hand, Amazon is becoming a revenue machine with very little margin, while Facebook generates 5x more profit despite far smaller top line numbers.



HOW THEY MAKE THEIR BILLIONS


Each of these companies is pretty unique in how they generate revenue, though there is some overlap:


  • Facebook and Alphabet each make the vast majority of their revenues from advertising (97% and 88%, respectively)

  • Apple makes 63% of their revenue from the iPhone, and another 21% coming from the iPad and Mac lines

  • Amazon makes 90% from its “Product” and “Media” categories, and 9% from AWS

  • Microsoft is diverse: Office (28%), servers (22%), Xbox (11%), Windows (9%), ads (7%), Surface (5%), and other (18%)

What does that look like?





Lastly, for fun, what if we added all these companies’ revenues together, and categorized them by source?



Note: this isn’t perfect. As an example, Amazon’s fast-growing advertising business gets lumped into their “Other” category.


Hardware, e-commerce, and and advertising make up 76% of all revenues.


Meanwhile, software isn’t the cash cow it used to be, but it does help serve as a means to an end for some companies. For example, Android doesn’t generate any revenue directly, but it does allow more users to buy apps in the Play Store and to search Google via their mobile devices. Likewise, Apple bundles in operating systems with each hardware purchase.

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Does The Reality Of "It's Different This Time" Get Tested This Week?

Authored by Mark St.Cyr,


If you were one of the myriad analysts, next-in-rotation fund managers, tech commentators, et al paraded across the financial/business media over this past week – you had a good week. The narrative of “earnings beats” together with the so-called “relief rally” emanating via the French elections helped propel the argument.


However, if one (once again) peered passed the headlines of Non-GAAP reporting alchemy that would make Issac Newton envious one could clearly see that all was not “gold.”


Both Amazon™, and Alphabet™ (aka Google™) beat handily, and yet, a few questions emerged via my reasoning. First:


Has Google Ad revenue benefited from an increasing advertising pie? Or, are we seeing the first hints of rotation from platform to platform as advertisers dump one for another in a desperate attempt to obtain some form of return for their social or digital ad dollars?


It’s possible it could be the latter, and if so it spells “it’s different this time” just like it has before. i.e., circa early 2000.


The reasoning for this is simple: Twitter™.


As I have stated on more occasions than I can count, the one company to watch for clues into what is the entire “tech” or “Silicon Valley” health of the “ads for eyeballs” model is Twitter. And this once songbird of everything that was/is “The Valley” did something that is the anathema of what is presumed to be the “holy of holies” metric for the entire genre. To wit:


But not too worry, for this is reported as an earnings “Beat” when using Non-GAAP metrics. Yes, declining (again – declining!) ad revenue is reported as “Good News!” The only person I can see with more wonderment across his face than the ghost of Sir Issac is that of Bernie Madoff as he watches all this from a cell wondering “And I’m in here for what precisely?”


Then, of course, there’s Amazon.


After disappointing reports over the past two quarters Amazon (once again) rocketed to new heights as the headlines of “Beat”, “Smashed” and every other exclamation known-to-man was used to report it raced across the media. And yet, if you looked closely, again, there are a few issues contained within that should make those who are closing their eyes and hitting the “Buy” button horns-over-hooves concern.


  1. Guidance for operating income in Q2 is expected to be between $425 Million and $1.075 Billion compared with the $1.3 Billion in the same quarter last year.

  2. Amazon’s total operating income was $1 Billion for this Qtr. AWS (i.e., their web services) made up $890 Million of this. That means nearly all of Amazon’s operating income was generated via the division most people who use Amazon haven’t even a clue exists. (I’ll add to that most 401K holders also.)

  3. This puts their Current P/E ratio at near 190 times earnings (187.4 via Morningstar™ as of 4/27/17)

Moreover, as I posed the idea of “What if?” into the “ads for eyeballs” assumptions earlier; what does one takeaway when viewing the current rocket ship ride of Amazon? For if personal spending is supposedly DOA as was reported via the latest GDP report (e.g., worst since 2009) and GDP is now reported to be an abysmal 0.7% (not a typo) what’s fueling this?


Hint: It’s an outlier, or said differently: It’s nothing but what’s known as a “Momo Play.” To view it as anything representative, or as a “gauge” of current economic health (As I heard many a talking-head try) is as I’ve stated before – an abject lesson for wanting to be blissfully, ignorant. (Always remembering this is my opinion, for who knows where this “rocket ship” can travel.)


So with the above for context the issue at hand is: “Now what?”


The real trouble, in my estimation, lies with precisely where we might be in regards to “the markets.” By all rational objective reasoning, backed with the lessons which should be held front-and-center from not just the dot-com crash, but also the financial crisis of ’08. One can’t shake the feeling that we’re precisely (once again) on that knife’s edge. And just the mere fact of the “markets” precariously balancing on that “edge” is beginning to draw blood. The tell-tale signs are everywhere. Below are only a few of the ever-growing list…


  • How does a GDP report of less than 1% allow any sane person to state, “Improving economy?” Trick question, it doesn’t unless you work on, or report on/for Wall Street.

  • How does the reflation trade transfer into a better economic outlook when all of the proposals so far have resulted in DOA status?

  • Explain the reasoning why U.S. “markets” rally off the news of a French primary, all the while its own Navy has sent an armada to the Korean peninsula threatening a nuclear standoff? “Bueller?”

  • What data (or better yet – logic) is the Federal Reserve using that warrants hiking rates twice in 90 days into an abysmal GDP report when its main reasoning for any/all monetary policy protocols are supposedly “data dependent?”

  • If one of the reasonings behind the Fed. hiking was to allow for the cutting if (or when) there was another emergency: How does that happen when the $Dollar is currently going in the exact opposite direction than it should as it hikes? Does that not imply the Fed. could by that very fact be the catalyst of a run n the $Dollar?

  • And if so? What then?

These are just a few of the very real questions that are now permeating the once “it’s different this time” argument for belief. The problem with it is – that’s what always gets said right before reality comes roaring back with a vengeance.


I can’t make this point enough: Only since the election of Donal Trump the “markets” have been on a rocket ride straight up. Before that moment (i.e., October) the Fed. Chair herself was musing the idea that the only way to heal the lasting effects still within the economy was to possibly run a “high pressure” policy stance. (i.e., uber-dovish)


That “ride” has (once again) allowed for the proclamation of the NASDAQ™ hitting never before seen in human history highs. (e.g., 6000+) All against a backdrop of declining GDP, along with declining revenue and more from many of its once star players. All while not accounting for (in my opinion) the effects of those 2 rate hikes. These have yet to be both factored, as well as felt, in the current “market.”


As of right now the “hopium” trade that is a direct result of the Trump “reflation” trade is still self-propelling – but it’s quickly running out of fuel as evidenced by not only none of the campaign promises being passed (i.e., Obamacare repeal and others) but a 1 week resolution was needed as to not shut the government down.


And the “markets” closed where?


Hint: Right back to where they were before when I stated “You are here.” And things have not gotten better, as a matter of fact, they are worse – far worse. (e.g., Unless you are one of those who like to buy-the-potential-nuclear-war-dip that is. And if so, take solace in your decisions, because the President keeps suggesting the idea is closer by the day.)


What the Fed. has unleashed into the “markets” via their ever evolving iterations of QE and its ever grateful HFT frontrunning brethren (see the now resigned Richmond Fed. president Lacker for clues) has been the only fuel as to power the markets where they now stand. What they’ve also done in unison is make everyone oblivious to the inherent dangers within.


Hedging and more has been a fool’s errand, and for many, an abject lesson in not only losing money, but status. (See the Hedge Fund industry for clues.) However, what might be even more indicative of that intervention is none other than the tech space, with all its unicorns, deca-corns, and even super-corns (yes, that’s now an actual term in “The Valley”) suddenly coming up lame in the unicorn stables of “Cha-ching!” Not to mention the IPO disasters and disappearance of those “Crushing it!” stock valuations. (See Snapchat™ for clues.)


This is where the beginning signs for caution are raised for anyone paying attention. And they are there – in spades. But there are also other areas to watch that help back up the hypothesis. And one of the first to show stress when things are not going as well as planned in “tech” land is: The Russell 2000™ e.g., the small business index.


The Russell is not only not showing the exuberance of the others, it’s beginning to show all the signs of rolling over. That is something to take notice in conjunction with the tech sector as it hits ever higher highs. How that dichotomy resolves is anyone’s guess at this moment. But trying to ascertain any clues is of a paramount importance in my opinion.


Another key earnings report that may give far more light than anyone estimates is coming up on Wednesday. That, of course, is Facebook™.


As of today all the estimates are that they’ll handily beat and some analysts are raising their targets. It’s very well they could, especially in today’s world of earnings reporting alchemy. However, one thing which caught my attention was the sudden touting a few weeks back that they had hit “5 Million advertisers.” Small businesses noted as the “key driver.”


“Sound great!” many are saying, and, in-truth, it is a worthy milestone. However, I see the timing as possibly a little suspect, here’s why… (I make this point for it has become near laughable how nearly all upcoming “tech” earnings reports now suddenly coincide with an ever-growing list of preceding announcements of grandiose ideas that are alluded to be right around the corner (like next week!) of flying cars, self driving trucks, rocket rides to space, virtual reality, just to name a few.)


Facebook as of late has been in the news with nothing but negative reports with a slew of horrendous acts being broadcast via their platform. e.g., Rape, kidnapping, beatings, and others. One of the concerns over all this (apart from the issue itself) was a possible backlash from potential advertisers. And who could blame them, and there lies the possible rub…


As I implied with the sudden “5 million” hoopla, what I’m asking is this: Is the addition of these stated 1 million plus new small business advertisers a replacing (therefore a diversion as to squash attention) for the potential of 1 or 2 (or more) large buyers who may have pulled ads?


In other words, if they’ve added so many “new” small business users – shouldn’t the ad revenue explode this report with all things being equal? I believe this is the metric to watch for.


How the numbers break down should be interesting. Google showed its own problem (via Youtube™) seemed to have been a one-off with no real impact. That said, I don’t think that comparison is the same for Facebook should the numbers show otherwise.


We shall see.


If there is a “hiccup” in Facebook’s reporting, coinciding with a realization that the reflation trade is all but DOA along with much of the legislation that was supposed to make it so. I believe we could be in for a very, very, interesting week ahead.


Then again, if a nuclear showdown does persist even more so than today?


I guess the “Buy The Nuclear Annihilation Dip” nonsense is back on.