Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) just filed paperwork to cut another 2,200 corporate jobs in Seattle, marking the latest chapter in what’s becoming a systematic hollowing-out of its headquarters. The WARN notice with Washington’s Employment Security Department signals permanent cuts hitting the region where Amazon once symbolized tech’s gravitational pull.
Here’s the tension: Amazon’s stock is up 7.27% over the past month and trading at $242.96. Analysts are piling on buy ratings with KeyBanc setting a $308 target and Wedbush going to $340. The company just delivered $1.95 in Q3 EPS, crushing estimates by 26.62%. So why the cuts?
The answer is in the efficiency playbook Amazon’s been running since 2023. EPS climbed from $0.17 in Q3 2022 to $1.95 in Q3 2025, a transformation driven by aggressive cost management and AI-powered automation. Andy Jassy’s mandate is clear: replace middle management layers with algorithmic decision-making. As we discussed in today’s Daily Profit newsletter, this AI-driven efficiency trend is reshaping how investors evaluate tech giants. The 14,000-role AI displacement strategy isn’t a response to weakness but an acceleration of what’s already working.
Wall Street loves it. KeyBanc called Amazon its “top large-cap idea in Internet and Retail,” citing underestimated AWS re-acceleration. Wedbush sees $25.2 billion in Q4 operating income, positioning Amazon as their “top eCommerce pick for 2026.”
Amazon’s margin expansion strategy reflects a broader shift in how tech companies balance growth with profitability. The company’s AWS segment and AI-driven cost management will be key factors when earnings are reported on February 5, providing insight into whether the efficiency gains can sustain analyst projections.