Table of Contents

AMZN (Amazon.com, Inc.)

The 30-Second Summary

What is Amazon? The Business Behind the Stock Ticker

To the average person, Amazon is the website with the smile logo where you can buy almost anything and have it delivered tomorrow. To a value investor, that's like describing an iceberg by only its tip. The publicly traded stock, ticker AMZN, represents a sprawling empire composed of several distinct and powerful “kingdoms,” each with vastly different economic characteristics. Understanding these kingdoms is the first step to rationally assessing the company's intrinsic_value. 1. The Retail & Logistics Kingdom: This is the Amazon everyone knows. It includes the online marketplaces (Amazon.com), physical stores (like Whole Foods), and the Prime subscription service. This kingdom is defined by massive scale and relentless efficiency. Its primary goal has never been to generate huge profits, but to generate massive cash flow and build an impenetrable economic_moat. The warehouses, delivery vans, and planes are the physical manifestation of this moat, creating a logistical barrier that is nearly impossible for competitors to replicate. While its operating margins are razor-thin, its true value lies in the customer loyalty it builds and the foundation it provides for the other, more profitable kingdoms. 2. The Cloud Kingdom (Amazon Web Services - AWS): This is the crown jewel and the primary profit engine of the empire. In simple terms, AWS is a massive, global “server rental” business. Instead of companies buying and maintaining their own expensive servers, they can rent computing power, storage, and other services from AWS. It's the digital infrastructure powering a huge portion of the modern internet, from streaming services like Netflix to corporate databases. Unlike the retail business, AWS is extraordinarily profitable, boasting high operating margins and creating sticky customer relationships due to high switching costs. 3. The Advertising Kingdom: This is the hidden giant within the empire. When you search for “running shoes” on Amazon, the top results are often “sponsored” products. That's Amazon's advertising business at work. By leveraging its massive trove of data on consumer buying habits, Amazon has built one of the world's largest and most effective advertising platforms. It's a very high-margin business that runs on top of the existing retail infrastructure, making it almost pure profit. Many investors mistakenly lump this in with the low-margin retail business, thereby underestimating its contribution to Amazon's overall value.

“There are two kinds of companies: those that work to try to charge more and those that work to charge less. We will be the second.” - Jeff Bezos

This quote perfectly captures the philosophy that built the retail kingdom, which in turn enabled the creation of the far more profitable AWS and Advertising kingdoms.

The Value Investor's Dilemma: Growth vs. Value

For decades, many traditional value investors, trained in the school of Benjamin Graham to look for “cigar butt” stocks (cheap, ugly companies with one last puff of value), avoided Amazon. Why? Because by almost every conventional metric, it has always looked expensive. Its P/E ratio is often astronomically high, and it has historically paid no dividend. This is the central dilemma AMZN presents: it forces us to evolve from Graham's focus on a cheap price to Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger's focus on business quality. As Munger famously said, “It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.” A value investor must analyze Amazon through this modern lens, focusing on three key areas that traditional metrics fail to capture:

How to Analyze Amazon: A Value Investing Framework

Given that a simple P/E ratio is misleading, how does a prudent investor attempt to value Amazon? The most effective method is a Sum-of-the-Parts (SOTP) analysis, combined with a deep qualitative assessment of its management and moats.

The Method: Sum-of-the-Parts (SOTP) Valuation

The logic is simple: if you own a company that operates a farm, a software business, and a car dealership, you wouldn't value them all using a car dealership multiple. You'd value each part separately and add them together. We do the same for Amazon.

Interpreting the Result

The SOTP value is not a precise price target, but a tool for rational thinking. It helps an investor see the “scaffolding” of the company's total value. Often, you may find that the value of AWS and Advertising alone accounts for a huge portion, or even all, of the company's current stock market capitalization. In such a scenario, buying the stock could mean you are essentially getting the entire global retail and logistics empire for free. This exercise forces you to think like a business owner, not a stock market speculator. It anchors your valuation in the underlying economics of the distinct businesses, protecting you from the emotional whims of the market. It's the quantitative application of understanding the “kingdoms” described above.

A Practical (Hypothetical) Example

Let's create a simplified SOTP analysis to illustrate the concept. The numbers are purely for demonstration.

Segment Metric (Operating Income) Peer Multiple (EV/OI) Segment Value
AWS $30 Billion 20x $600 Billion
Advertising $15 Billion 25x $375 Billion
Retail (N. America & Int'l) $5 Billion 8x $40 Billion
Total Enterprise Value $1,015 Billion
Less: Net Debt -$15 Billion
Total Equity Value $1,000 Billion

In this hypothetical case, the estimated intrinsic value is $1 trillion. If the company's market cap were, say, $800 billion, it would suggest the stock is trading at a discount to its SOTP value, providing a potential margin_of_safety. Conversely, if the market cap were $1.5 trillion, a value investor would conclude it's likely overvalued, regardless of how much they admire the business.

Advantages and Limitations

The Bull Case (Investment Strengths)

The Bear Case & Common Pitfalls (Risks)