Operating margins hit 95th percentile at 11.7% yet insiders sold for 20 straight quarters—excellence at a price requiring perfection.
Amazon demonstrates the Buffett paradox: a wonderful company at a price that requires believing today's exceptional execution continues forever.
Does this business have durable competitive advantages that protect returns?
This framework sees multiple reinforcing moats: AWS's switching costs, marketplace network effects, and scale advantages that actually strengthen during economic stress. The margin expansion from 3.7% to 11.7% in eight quarters demonstrates not just recovery but widening competitive advantage.
How much cash does an owner actually get to keep after maintaining the business?
Applying this lens reveals a tension: phenomenal cash generation ($54.5B OCF) being aggressively reinvested ($40.1B capex), leaving modest owner earnings. This framework distinguishes between maintenance and growth capex — Amazon's surge appears predominantly growth-oriented, suggesting true owner earnings exceed the reported $7.7B FCF.
If you bought this entire business today, would what it earns justify what you paid?
This framework sees a premium price requiring exceptional execution. The negative 347bp spread to Treasuries demands Amazon grow at nearly 10% forever. While the P/E is low by Amazon's standards, the absolute valuation requires believing this stalwart can sustain growth company returns.
Can this business deploy large amounts of capital at high rates of return?
This framework applauds Amazon's capital deployment. Doubling capex intensity while expanding margins to the 95th percentile demonstrates exactly the high-return reinvestment opportunity Buffett seeks. The company is building tomorrow's monopoly with today's cash flow.
Amazon presents the classic Buffett dilemma: a wonderful business at a less-than-wonderful price. The moat is widening, capital deployment is exceptional, and the company demonstrates remarkable resilience. Yet insiders are selling, the math requires perpetual high growth, and even quality companies can be poor investments at the wrong price. Would Buffett buy a business where management won't stop selling while claiming the future has never been brighter?
This analysis applies Warren Buffett's published investment framework to publicly available financial data. It is not authored by, endorsed by, or affiliated with Warren Buffett. Educational purposes only. Not financial advice.