Motley Fool Money - Jeff Bezos on Taking the Long View
Episode Date: January 21, 2020“One of the time-honored traditions of investors is to play the role of skeptic.” Even in October 2000, when his company’s stock had fallen 50% in less than a year, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was... able to see profitability in the days ahead. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're a small business owner, you already know what it takes to keep everything moving.
You're juggling customers, invoices, and about 100 decisions every day.
Thankfully, taxes don't have to be one more thing on that list with Intuit TurboTax.
You can get your business taxes done for you with a full service expert.
TurboTax matches you with your dedicated tax expert.
Who knows your industry understands your business write-offs and gives you the personalized advice your business deserves.
upload your documents right in the app, hand everything off, and still feel like you're in the loop the whole way through.
You can even get real-time updates on your expert's progress right in the app, which makes it so much easier to stay on track.
And you can get unlimited expert help at no extra cost, even on nights and weekends during tax season.
Visit turbotax.com to get matched with an expert today, only available with TurboTax full service experts.
With the Motley Fool Money Extra, I'm Chris Hill.
A market cap of more than $900 billion today means that Amazon is not just an e-commerce giant.
The company's growth in services like cloud computing, fulfillment, and even entertainment
have led some to question whether Amazon should be broken up.
That wasn't always the case.
The Motley Fool's co-founder, David Gardner, talked with Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos back in October of 2000,
when the main questions facing the business were not about its dominance.
Amazon was a pioneer in e-commerce, sure, but 20 years ago, the main question was,
is this company ever going to make any money?
Is profitability an if or a win for Amazon?
It's a win, and I think that the best evidence for that is the fact that this quarter, Q3,
we had a $25 million operating profit on a U.S. books, music, and video segment.
You know, it's very clear, I think, to most observers at this point that if we hadn't invested significantly in international opportunities and new product categories, which are getting a lot of traction, then the company would be profitable today.
It would also, in my opinion, have a much lower market value because of the decreased opportunity.
When you were last on our show around the first of the year, Amazon's value was about $20 billion.
dollars. The value of Amazon today's around, about $11 billion. How has the market changed?
Why has Amazon.com and its shareholders have been a little punished?
Well, I think the whole sector has been treated roughly, and I think maybe very appropriately.
You know, if you look at 1999, 1999 was a year where a startup company could raise $60 million in venture capital with a single phone call,
and then spend half of it on television advertising in a single quarter.
That is probably not rational and healthy for the market to support that kind of activity.
One of the time-honored traditions of investors is to play the role of skeptic.
And I think that we're seeing a much healthier, you know, we're seeing that happen today in a much healthier way.
Okay.
And if you look at the long term, and I know that you guys at fool.com share our approach to this,
if you look at the long term, the longest period you can measure Amazon.com over is the three-and-a-half.
half years that we've been a publicly traded company. And our stock is up a factor of 20 in that
period of time, even after falling three quarters off of its 52-week high. So we're very proud of
the returns we generated for our long-term shareholders. And we wish that the stock chart
slowly and continuously moved up and to the right in a straight line. That would be the best for
everybody. But unfortunately, that's not how stocks work.
