
Amazon Earnings Unpacked | Pivot
Kara Swisher (host), Scott Galloway (host), Narrator
In this episode of Pivot, featuring Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway, Amazon Earnings Unpacked | Pivot explores amazon’s AI-Fueled Cloud Boom Cements Jassy’s Post-Bezos Leadership The discussion breaks down Amazon’s blowout Q1 earnings, highlighting surging revenue and tripled profits driven largely by AWS and new ad revenue from Prime Video. Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway frame Amazon as essentially a cloud company whose future growth is centered on AI-enabled cloud services. They argue that Andy Jassy is finally stepping out of Jeff Bezos’s shadow, leveraging his AWS background to position Amazon as a core AI infrastructure provider. The hosts also situate Amazon within the broader big-tech landscape, noting that only a handful of companies can afford the immense capital needed to dominate AI and cloud.
Amazon’s AI-Fueled Cloud Boom Cements Jassy’s Post-Bezos Leadership
The discussion breaks down Amazon’s blowout Q1 earnings, highlighting surging revenue and tripled profits driven largely by AWS and new ad revenue from Prime Video. Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway frame Amazon as essentially a cloud company whose future growth is centered on AI-enabled cloud services. They argue that Andy Jassy is finally stepping out of Jeff Bezos’s shadow, leveraging his AWS background to position Amazon as a core AI infrastructure provider. The hosts also situate Amazon within the broader big-tech landscape, noting that only a handful of companies can afford the immense capital needed to dominate AI and cloud.
Key Takeaways
AWS is now the core growth engine of Amazon.
With AWS revenue up 17% and operating income up 84%, the hosts argue Amazon should be understood primarily as a cloud company that also runs a powerful retail and media platform.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
AI-enabled cloud services are the main driver of big tech growth.
Most companies lack the capital to build their own AI infrastructure, so they will “rent” AI and training capacity from a small group of hyperscalers like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Andy Jassy is solidifying his legitimacy as CEO after a rough patch.
Strong earnings and clear execution on AWS and AI are seen as Jassy’s way of stepping out of Bezos’s shadow and ending speculation that Bezos might return.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Concentration of AI infrastructure power creates massive moats.
The capital intensity of AI infrastructure means only a few firms can participate at scale, giving Amazon and a few peers durable competitive advantages and pricing power.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Amazon’s advertising and media strategy quietly boosts profitability.
Turning on ads for Prime Video has helped drive a 24% increase in advertising revenue, adding a high-margin revenue stream on top of retail and cloud.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
For Amazon, focus—not expansion into new areas—is the smartest move now.
The hosts suggest Amazon doesn’t need new big initiatives; doubling down on AI, cloud, and systematic execution is the best strategy given the scale of current opportunities.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Regulatory scrutiny remains a key overhang despite strong performance.
Even as Amazon posts stellar numbers, it still faces significant marketplace-related regulatory and congressional investigations that could shape its future tactics.
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Notable Quotes
“I would argue [Amazon] is now essentially a cloud company with a really strong retail platform that they sell media against.”
— Scott Galloway
“Most companies are training their LLMs on one of three cloud providers.”
— Scott Galloway
“Do you have $100 million to build out your own AI infrastructure or do you wanna rent ours? 'Well, that's an easy one,' said 99.99% of organizations around the world.”
— Scott Galloway
“In this latest earnings call, Andy was saying, 'What do you think of me now, bitch?'”
— Scott Galloway (paraphrasing Andy Jassy’s subtext)
“They should do absolutely nothing new. They should stay focused on this.”
— Scott Galloway
Questions Answered in This Episode
How sustainable is Amazon’s AI- and cloud-driven growth if enterprise AI adoption slows or consolidates around a few dominant platforms?
The discussion breaks down Amazon’s blowout Q1 earnings, highlighting surging revenue and tripled profits driven largely by AWS and new ad revenue from Prime Video. ...
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
What specific regulatory actions could most meaningfully challenge Amazon’s position in cloud, marketplace operations, or advertising?
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
How might Amazon’s deep investment in Anthropic shape its competitive stance versus Microsoft–OpenAI and Google’s in-house models?
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
In what ways could Amazon better integrate its retail, media, and cloud arms to create defensible AI-powered consumer and business experiences?
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
What indicators should investors and observers track to gauge whether Andy Jassy’s strategy is working beyond headline earnings figures?
Get the full analysis with uListen AI
Transcript Preview
Amazon is out with its Q1 earnings. Revenue went up 13% to 143 billion and profits more than tripled to 10.4 billion, both exceeding Wall Street's expectations. AWS, Amazon Cloud's computing unit, had a particularly strong quarter with revenue up 17% and operating income rocketing 84% to 9.4 billion. Really strong numbers. Uh, obviously Amazon wants to be a big player in AI, cloud computing and other areas, and, uh, they have said AI (laughs) over 30 times on the earnings call. They said it. Uh, Amazon recently added another 2.5 billion to its Anthropic investment. That's their company they're backing like Microsoft's backing OpenAI. Uh, Anthropic's made up of people who left OpenAI essentially. Advertising sales were also up 24% fueled by, uh, that move to turn on ads for Prime Video. Um, so what, what do you think they're doing? I- I'm gonna start first actually. I think Andy Jassy is, is moving himself into the Satya Nadella/Tim Cook position here. I think it's very hard to run a company when you're not, um, the founder, es- and especially if the founder's still living. Um, and so you, you tend not to get out of the shadows. He has been there since a very young age, um, but he's starting to figure out how to run this place I think. Um, I like him a lot better than Jeff Bezos, I can tell you that, as a person. Um, but he's... He obviously ran the AWS unit and brought it to... really saved Amazon's butt creating that unit, and he was the one doing it. So I think he's sort of finding his way in, in an interesting way. He still faces enormous regulatory and, um, congressional investigations as, to the Marketplace, et cetera. But in general, I think people are liking what they're doing around AI and being very crisp. But I don't know. Your thoughts?
If you wanna be the CEO of a company, typically what you... Typically, the CEO is usually the person running the, you know, the most profitable operating units. Andy ran the most profitable group with the big- the best future and that is AWS. And if you really look at Am- Amazon, I would argue, is now essentially a cloud company with a really strong retail platform that they sell media against. And the, the... It's not only... I mean, you wanna talk about chocolate and peanut butter, cloud plus AI. Most companies are training their LLMs on one of three cloud providers. These guys are the only ones that have the money to make the sort of requisite investments where you can basically rent your AI or train your own LLMs on their AI-compatible cloud services. So you not only have cloud but you have AI-enabled cloud with huge moats 'cause no one else can make these types of investments. Amazon, Google, and Microsoft have 67% share of global cloud services. Um, this is... I mean, this is a gift. These, these companies, uh, really th- this quarter was about cloud. Now the fear is that if AI... if every company doesn't start scrambling to try and build their own front-end AI applications or figure out how AI can work in their business, if there's any sort of check back these companies will feel that. But these companies themselves don't believe that at all. They continue to add unbeli- make unbelievable investments to offer incredible opportunity. It's like, do you have $100 million to build out your own AI infrastructure or do you wanna rent ours? "Well, that's an easy one," said 99.99% of organizations around the world.
Install uListen to search the full transcript and get AI-powered insights
Get Full TranscriptGet more from every podcast
AI summaries, searchable transcripts, and fact-checking. Free forever.
Add to Chrome