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Winner or Loser: Amazon Stock Is Only Getting Bigger

Amazon stock

Fun fact: Amazon currently has a market value (market capitalization) of about $1.6 trillion.

The market cap of the Russell 2000 Index is only $1.9 trillion. If Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZNAMZN) keeps up its current trajectory, it will be bigger than the entire Russell 2000 Index in a matter of weeks.

That’s one company’s stock … bigger than an index of 2,000 of America’s most promising small-cap stocks.

It’s easy to see how Amazon ballooned into a $1.6 trillion company.

Back in the good old days before COVID (you know, six months ago…), Amazon already benefited from a variety of trends it helped create:

Then COVID happened. And all of these trends got kicked into overdrive.

Americans started ordering online a lot more while under lockdown.

But as malls began to reopen, consumers didn’t miss them all that much. Once you get used to packages magically arriving on your doorstep a day after you ordered them, going to the mall seems like a waste of time.

With movie theaters still closed, or at least at reduced capacity, streaming via Netflix and Amazon Prime Video became the next best thing. That’s as true today as it was in March.

And with a large chunk of the white-collar workforce still working from home (perhaps forever), keeping everyone connected via cloud services is critical. Amazon’s AWS invented the cloud as we know it, and it remains the biggest player in the field.

All of this was reflected in Amazon’s quarterly earnings call last week.

Revenues were up 40% over the previous year, blowing away analyst estimates by $7 billion. Revenues from AWS jumped 29%.

Earnings per share nearly doubled, coming in at $10.30 for the quarter. And this despite Amazon dedicating more than $4 billion in investments to help it fight COVID. To say the company killed it this past quarter would be the understatement of the year.

All of that shows us how far Amazon has come. But I’m more interested in where it’s going.

Let’s see how it ranks using Money & Markets Chief Investment Strategist Adam O’Dell’s stock rating system.

How Amazon Stock Ranks

Amazon sports an overall rating of 86, making it the crème de la crème. Only 14% of all stocks in Adam’s universe rate higher. Amazon picks up the most points on growth and momentum. It lags in value and size. Amazon is a big company — and it’s not cheap.

Let’s break it down.

Is Amazon a Buy?

After a run like this, I understand being a little apprehensive.

But based on its high scores in growth, volatility, quality and momentum — and its overall rating of 86 — Amazon is a winner.

If you’re worried about buying at the top, you could spread out your buying over time using dollar-cost averaging.

I also believe that this macro environment favors Amazon. If you’re waiting for the stock to get cheap, that day may never come.

Money & Markets contributor Charles Sizemore specializes in income and retirement topics, and co-host on our podcast, The Bull & The Bear. He is also a frequent guest on CNBC, Bloomberg and Fox Business. 

Follow Charles on Twitter @CharlesSizemore.