Amazon said first-quarter earnings rose to $2.78 a share, easily topping Wall Street’s expectation of $1.62, as revenue climbed to $181.5 billion from $155.7 billion a year earlier. The numbers give investors a fresh read on how the company is performing while it keeps pouring money into artificial intelligence.
The results come as markets are looking for signs that the massive spending by Big Tech hyperscalers on AI is translating into business gains. Amazon continues to invest in artificial intelligence, and that spending is being judged against a broader forecast that AI hyperscalers are expected to spend $650 billion in capital expenditures in 2026. For Amazon, the question is no longer whether it is spending heavily, but whether those investments can keep producing growth that beats expectations.
The quarter was stronger than the year-ago period, when Amazon reported earnings of $1.59 a share and revenue of $155.7 billion. This time, both measures came in ahead of analyst forecasts, with revenue also above the $177.2 billion expected by analysts. That gap matters because it shows Amazon can still deliver growth even as the company is under pressure to justify its AI push.
The tension for investors is straightforward: Amazon’s results are solid, but the market is increasingly demanding proof that the enormous capital outlays tied to AI will pay off. The company is not alone in facing that scrutiny. Big Tech hyperscalers are all being measured against the same standard, and the spending expected in 2026 underscores how large that bet has become.
For now, Amazon has answered the quarter with better-than-expected numbers. What it has not answered is the bigger test now hanging over the sector: how quickly AI spending turns into returns that investors can see in the results.