The bull case for Amazon.com Inc (AMZN) isn't about selling more stuff online anymore. JPMorgan thinks the real story heading into 2026 is about cloud computing acceleration, AI finally making money, and a company that's learned to invest heavily without lighting cash on fire.
After years of pouring capital into infrastructure and automation, Amazon is hitting a point where all those pieces start working together. Scale kicks in, AI gets monetized, and margins actually expand. That's the setup JPMorgan is betting on for the next leg higher.
AWS Is Picking Up Speed Again
JPMorgan expects AWS growth to accelerate as enterprise customers ramp up AI workloads and get back to serious cloud migrations. The demand isn't just coming from third-party AI models. Amazon's own AI stack is doing heavy lifting here: Trainium chips, Bedrock platform, SageMaker tools, Nova models, and AgentCore are all helping AWS defend its turf while making the economics work better for customers.
Here's the key shift: AI is becoming a growth driver inside AWS, not just a margin drain. There's still some noise from capacity timing, but the trajectory looks solid.
AI Working Outside the Cloud Too
Amazon's AI story goes beyond AWS. JPMorgan sees AI improving efficiency across logistics, fulfillment operations, and advertising technology. The result? Lower costs to serve customers and better engagement across the Prime ecosystem. Meanwhile, automation and robotics are helping stabilize operating expenses, particularly in North America where costs have historically been volatile.
That operational leverage matters a lot when you're balancing growth ambitions against rising AI infrastructure spending.
Margins Are Finally Expanding
JPMorgan points to margin expansion happening in both North America and international operations. The drivers are structural: inbound regionalization that cuts shipping distances, smarter inventory placement, same-day delivery infrastructure that's actually efficient, and advertising revenue that keeps climbing. These aren't temporary wins from cutting corners. They're durable improvements to how the business operates.
Despite the enormous AI capital expenditures, JPMorgan sees a meaningful free cash flow inflection coming in 2026 and 2027. The combination of disciplined spending, improving margins, and higher AWS contribution makes that possible.
Amazon built its empire on retail. The next decade might be defined by how well it turns AI and operational discipline into sustainable profit growth.




