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Amazon CEO Andy Jassy defends $200B spending plan: ‘This isn’t some sort of quixotic top-line grab’

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Amazon Web Services has accelerated its growth mode thanks in part to AI demand. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

Amazon Web Services revenue grew at its fastest pace in more than three years, up 24% to $35.6 billion in the fourth quarter, in a sign that demand for artificial intelligence and custom silicon is boosting corporate spending on the cloud.

The company disclosed revenue for its in-house data center chips for the first time, saying its Trainium and Graviton processors have a combined annual run rate of more than $10 billion.

But the revenue milestones are coming at a big cost. In the earnings release, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy signaled plans to spend a record $200 billion in capital expenditures across Amazon in 2026, citing “seminal opportunities like AI, chips, robotics, and low earth orbit satellites.”

Most of the capital spending is on AWS, Jassy said on the earnings conference call, seeking to assure investors that Amazon is “monetizing capacity as fast as we can install it.”

He pushed back on skepticism about the capital spending, saying “this isn’t some sort of quixotic top-line grab,” and compared the AI investment cycle to the early days of the company’s core cloud business. He called the current moment an “extraordinarily unusual opportunity to forever change the size of AWS and Amazon as a whole.”

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When asked about the shape of AI demand, Jassy offered a “barbell” analogy. On one end are the AI research labs spending “gobs and gobs of compute.” On the other are enterprises using AI for routine tasks like customer service and business process automation.

But the massive $200 billion bet is targeted at the “middle of the barbell,” core enterprise production workloads, which Jassy argues haven’t really arrived yet.

“The lion’s share of that demand is still yet to come,” Jassy said. He predicted this middle section “may end up being the largest and the most durable” part of the AI market.

Amazon’s plan adds to a wave of record-setting AI infrastructure spending from tech giants.

For the full year, Amazon generated $139.5 billion in cash from its operations in 2025, up 20%. But after accounting for the massive infrastructure buildout, the company was left with $11.2 billion in free cash flow, down from $38.2 billion a year earlier. 

That means Amazon is making more money than ever, but plowing nearly all of it back into building out AI capacity, leaving little cash left over for shareholders.

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Amazon shares fell 10% after-hours following the earnings report. In addition to the outsized capex projection, the company’s profits of $1.95/share just missed Wall Street’s expectations.

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