3 Reasons to Buy Amazon Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

In This Article:

Key Points

  • E-commerce is growing as a percentage of retail sales, and Amazon is the largest player in the U.S. by a wide margin.

  • CEO Andy Jassy sees a future where generative AI is built into every app.

  • Advertising is Amazon's fastest-growing business.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Amazon ›

The S&P 500 is making its way back up from a tariff-included plummet, but not all of its stocks are doing as well. Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) stock is down 8% year-to-date on May 22, as investors continue to worry about how the company will be affected by tariffs.

CEO Andy Jassy addressed how the company could be affected and how it's responding during the first-quarter earnings call on May 1, which was prior to the easing of tariffs on May 12. He noted several points in Amazon's favor. Most of its e-commerce sales are the small, cheaper essentials that people have to buy anyway. It has a huge selection, so customers should still be able to find what they need on the platform, even if they switch brands or sellers. During times of uncertainty, customers are also likely to buy from a retailer they trust, and Amazon has built up experience-based trust with its hundreds of millions of Prime members and other shoppers.

The market took that with a grain of salt. Retailers are sending mixed messages about how they're going to manage with higher tariffs, and investors are waiting to see how the fees will affect Amazon's performance.

In the meantime, at the lower price, Amazon stock looks priced to buy. It trades at a historically cheap price-to-earnings ratio of 33, and it still has big opportunities.Here's why.

1. E-commerce is still increasing as a percentage of retail

Amazon is a lot of things these days, but its main business is still e-commerce, which accounts for around 60% of its sales. E-commerce is still a relatively small portion of the American (and global) economy's total retail sales. Online sales accounted for 21.4% of U.S. retail sales in 2024, according to eMarketer, and are expected to reach 23% by 2027. Each of those percentages translates into many billions of dollars, and that trend should keep moving higher. As the leader in the industry, with about 40% of the U.S. market, a huge amount of that growth should land in Amazon's market-leading lap.

An excited person looking at a phone.
Image source: Getty Images.

The company makes moves all the time to keep its lead and even expand it. It's always adding new brands to the marketplace. It is expanding with a greater focus on luxury, with a recent partnership with iconic luxury retailer Saks Fifth Avenue. After the success of its regional warehouse rollout, which puts more products closer to more customers, it's now renovating its inbound channels to keep the warehouses fully stocked at cost-efficient rates. Every quarter, Amazon has been beating its own records for delivery speed, and it delivered the most same-day shipments ever in the first quarter of 2025.