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Amazon and Alphabet have underperformed the S&P 500 year to date, but certain analysts see more than 40% upside in both stocks.
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Amazon is a triple threat with strong positions in e-commerce, digital advertising, and cloud computing, and the company has consistently beat Wall Street’s earnings estimates.
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Alphabet is the market leader in digital advertising, and it’s gaining market share in cloud services, but two antitrust lawsuits could force the company to break up.
Shares of Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG) have fallen a few percentage points year to date despite a 2% return in the benchmark S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC). But certain Wall Street analysts anticipate substantial gains in those stocks in the next 12 months, as detailed below:
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Ivan Feinseth at Tigress Financial has set Amazon with a target price of $305 per share. That implies 44% upside from its current share price of $212. It also implies a market value of $3.2 trillion.
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Paul Chew at Phillip Securities has set Alphabet with a target price of $250 per share. That implies 45% upside from its current share price of $172. It also implies a market value of $3 trillion.
Here’s what investors should know about Amazon and Alphabet.
The investment thesis for Amazon centers on its strong position in three growing markets. It runs the most popular online marketplace outside of China, powering nearly 41% of retail e-commerce sales in the United States. Amazon is also the largest retail media company, collecting nearly 77% of domestic-retail ad spending and 40% of global-retail ad spending.
Finally, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the largest public cloud, holding 29% market share in infrastructure and platform services. With more customers and partners than any other cloud platform, AWS is particularly well positioned to capitalize on growing demand for artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure. The company has leaned into that opportunity by developing custom chips for training and inference.
Importantly, Amazon is also using AI across its retail business to improve productivity and efficiency. CEO Andy Jassy says the company is developing about 1,000 generative AI tools to make warehouse robots smarter, improve inventory allocation, and optimize delivery routes. Those innovations, coupled with the ongoing restructuring of its logistics network, should improve retail margins in the coming years.
As a caveat, Amazon may struggle with tariffs. Morgan Stanley estimates 60% of sellers on the marketplace have some exposure to China, and Chinese sellers represent an important source of advertising revenue. Nevertheless, Andy Jassy believes its diversified seller base will let the company “weather challenging conditions better than others.”