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Amazon on Thursday predicted a slowdown in sales growth during the year-end holiday shopping season, sending shares in the e-commerce colossus tumbling.
Sales could grow as little as 2 percent in the final three months of this year, the company said, crimped by a strong US dollar that makes products more expensive in other countries.
Amazon shares plunged some 20 percent in after-market trades but regained some ground, down about 14 percent to $95.32 at 2130 GMT.
The company nevertheless returned to profit in the third quarter after two consecutive quarters of losses, with a net profit of $2.87 billion for the period from July to September, according to the statement issued Thursday.
Sales in the recently ended third quarter increased 15 percent to $127.1 billion, compared with $110.8 billion during the same period a year earlier, it reported.
Customer response to big Amazon sales events in the past four months has been "quite positive" and "it's clear that particularly during these uncertain economic times, customers appreciate Amazon's continued focus on value and convenience," said chief executive Andy Jassy.
US tech giants that long seemed impervious to broad economic ills have seen their armor crack this year, with slowing growth and revenue eroding the faith of investors and their share prices.
While it has a lucrative AWS cloud computing unit and its Prime video offering, Amazon is a retailer at heart, noted independent tech analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group.
"When people are having a hard time making ends meet, retail tends to take a hit," Enderle said.
And while founder and former chief executive Jeff Bezos was savvy about retail, "he went off to play with rockets" at his Blue Origin enterprise leaving Amazon in the hands of Jassy, known for his cloud computing prowess, the analyst added.
"Amazon is not a cloud company, it is a retail company, and a cloud computing guy is in charge," Enderle contended.
Meta and Google parent Alphabet both saw share prices tank after disappointing quarterly earnings, as global economic woes along with competition undermined the digital ad revenue powering their money-making engines.
Even business tech stalwart Microsoft saw share prices drop after it released earnings figures showing economic conditions were also tightening budgets when it comes to customers of its cloud, software and services offerings.
I.Widmer--NZN