
"Amazon.com Inc. ( NASDAQ: AMZN) has been one of the stock market's biggest success stories ever. The company had its initial public offering in May 1997 and traded for an astonishingly low split-adjusted price of just seven cents per share. Since then, the stock has gained 302,240% as the company has grown into the linchpin of e-commerce. Since its inception, Amazon has become a mainstay in the Magnificent 7 and now commands the fifth-largest market cap of any publicly traded company."
"However, for investors, what matters most now is how the stock performs going forward. Let's crunch the numbers on a 2030 price prediction for Amazon. Of course, no one has a crystal ball. But based on the macroeconomic environment, industry trends, Amazon's growth metrics, and other factors such as price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, 24/7 Wall St. can make cases for bulls, bears, and a baseline."
"From 2014 to 2024, shares of Amazon surged by more than 1,025%, from $19.94 to $223.75. A considerable amount of that gain came between March 2020-coinciding with the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic-and last year. From March 13, 2020, through the end of December 2024, the stock climbed from $89.25 per share to $134.50, a gain of 150.70%, as the company became the focal point for sourcing materials during lockdowns."
"Over the past decade, revenue increased from $89 billion to $638 billion, an astounding increase of more than 616%. At the same time, net income (profit) grew from −$0.241 billion to $59.2 billion, which translates to an incredible gain of 24,664.3%. The ride up was not always smooth, though. All those COVID-19 era sales being "pulled forward" led to challenges in 2022, and the company swung to a surprise loss."
Amazon's market value and stock price have risen dramatically since the 1997 IPO, with a split-adjusted IPO price of $0.07 and cumulative gains of 302,240%. From 2014 to 2024 the share price rose over 1,025% and revenue climbed from $89 billion to $638 billion. Net income moved from a loss of $0.241 billion to $59.2 billion. The COVID-19 period accelerated sales, producing large gains but causing sales pull-forward that produced challenges and a surprise loss in 2022. Future performance to 2030 will depend on e-commerce demand, AWS and advertising growth, valuation measures, and macroeconomic and industry trends.
Read at 24/7 Wall St.
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