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Infrastructure

Here’s Why Amazon (AMZN) Might Be the Ultimate Hard-Asset and AI Infrastructure Stock


Most mega-cap and Mag 7 names are either asset-light platforms or asset-heavy industrials. Amazon is one of the very few that owns the dirt and the compute.

That dual ownership, hardened by $44.2 billion of Q1 CapEx and a stated $200 billion CapEx plan for 2026, is the rarest setup in the market.

The hard-asset half of the thesis

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) operates one of the largest physical fulfillment networks on Earth: warehouses, sortation centers, last-mile vehicles, robotics and an air freight fleet. These assets are productive, depreciable, and effectively non-reproducible at speed.

The proof is in throughput. Q1 unit growth hit 15%, the highest since the tail end of covid lockdowns, while online stores grew 12% to $64.25 billion. Same-day or overnight delivery passed 1 billion items in 2026 and counting. Replacement cost for that footprint is staggering.

The AI infrastructure half

AWS is now a $150 billion annualized revenue run rate business growing 28% year over year, the fastest in 15 quarters, at a 38% operating margin. The custom silicon business (Graviton, Trainium, Nitro) is on a $20 billion run rate growing triple digits, with over $225 billion in revenue commitments for Trainium. Anthropic alone signed over $100 billion, on top of an AWS backlog of $364 billion.

CEO Andy Jassy framed the scale: “In the first three years of this AI wave, AWS’s AI revenue run rate is over $15 billion, nearly 260 times larger” than AWS’s first three years. On returns, he was direct: “We have high confidence this will be monetized well, as we already have customer commitments for a substantial portion of it.”

Bear case, addressed

Retail margins are thin, but AWS carries the mix. AI is commoditizing the model layer, which benefits the picks-and-shovels provider that owns the chips, racks, and power. Free cash flow TTM fell 95% to $1.2 billion on CapEx intensity, and long-term debt rose to $119.1 billion. That is the price of building the rails.

Where the market sits

Shares are up around 19% year to date and 28% over the past year, with a P/E near 32 and analyst target of $311.55. Polymarket pegs 86% odds that 2026 CapEx clears $170 billion. The combination of physical reach and AI compute is what makes the setup defensible.



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