Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)
Amazon is a leader across multiple industries. Most of these should prove to be excellent long-term tailwinds.
Warren Buffett retired at the end of 2025, and Greg Abel will take his place in 2026. Amazon stock might be back on the menu for Berkshire, but there are a few caveats.
The final trades of the day with the 'Fast Money' traders.
Wedbush Securities said 2026 is shaping up to be a decisive year for consumer internet companies, marked by a widening gap between winners and losers as investors assess artificial intelligence monetization, autonomous vehicle disruption, and sustained investment cycles across the sector. The firm wrote in a note that 2025 delivered solid performance for the group, with the analysts' coverage universe posting an average return of about 23%, compared with roughly 19% for the Nasdaq Index.
Amazon (AMZN, Financials) is entering 2026 with renewed optimism from Wall Street, as top analysts project a rebound in its cloud and artificial intelligence bu
Mad Money host Jim Cramer doesn't yet appear ready to give up on shares of Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), even after lagging most of its peers in the Magnificent Seven basket.
In a year where the benchmark S&P 500 index managed to gain more than 17%, that flat performance could be alarming. Yet zooming out tells a more constructive story—Amazon is up more than 40% since April, has consistently beaten expectations each quarter, and continues to enjoy broad analyst support.
Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) is emerging as one of the most popular stock picks among retail investors thanks to its cloud computing efforts.
The retailer reported a 33% year-over-year drop in adjusted income last quarter.
Big Tech's biggest players, including Meta, Apple and OpenAI, stumbled in 2025 as botched live demos, unpopular product decisions, an underwhelming GPT-5 launch and massive cloud outages exposed growing gaps between industry hype and real-world execution.