Amazon earnings

    By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool

    | 2:30PM 2/01/2012
    An online giant sees its margins contract as it replaces physical delivery with digital delivery. Revenue's growing. Profitability's shrinking. It may even post an operating loss during the next quarter. Not many months ago, this was Netflix. Now, it's Amazon.com.

    By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool

    | 8:45AM 10/28/2011
    The Kindle Fire hits the market next month, and the $199 tablet is already a "hot" seller. This would normally be the kind of news that would send board rooms into a frenzy of high-fives, but Amazon won't turn much of a profit on the entry-level tablets. Then again, it may not need to.

    By The Associated Press

    | 8:10AM 10/26/2011
    Amazon's spending on expansion will eventually help its bottom line, but right now it's costing the online retailer on Wall Street. The company's third-quarter net income fell 73 percent despite revenue growth as Amazon built sales fulfillment centers at a rapid clip. Neither that drop nor its revenue outlook for the current quarter made investors happy.

    By Danny King

    | 7:00PM 1/20/2011
    Amazon.com on Thursday announced it is buying Lovefilm, a European home-video distributor that some have called the Netflix of Europe. The deal will give the world's largest online retailer a stronger foothold in digital-video distribution. Will it buy Netflix next?

    By Danny King

    | 5:09PM 10/21/2010
    Amazon's third-quarter profits rose 16% thanks to surge in sales of electronic products such as its Kindle e-reader, the world's largest online retailer reported after the bell Thursday.

    By Sarah Weinman

    | 9:40AM 7/23/2010
    Investors hammered Amazon over it's underwhelming second-quarter results. That's no biggie for the online retailer, though. When it comes to e-books, Amazon remains top dog, and it looks very likely to stay that way.

    By Dawn Kawamoto

    | 5:30PM 7/22/2010
    Amazon earnings misses Wall Street expectations, share tumble in after-market trading.