While investors have largely given Amazon a pass for focusing on growth and investing rather than turning a strong profit, Amazon has been making some moves lately to strengthen its bottom line. It boosted its Prime 2-day shipping membership program annual fee from $79 to $99 in March to offset higher shipping costs.
Shipping costs rose 31 percent to $1.83 billion during the quarter.
And to entice more people to sign up for the service at the $99 price, which includes its streaming video service, on Tuesday the retailer said it inked a deal with HBO to stream some of its older shows online beginning May 21. The news was a coup for Amazon. HBO has steadfastly refused to license any of its programming to other streaming services such as Netflix or Hulu. In a media call, executives did not give specifics but said renewals were exceeding expectations.
Net income for the quarter rose to $108 million, or 23 cents per share. That compares with net income of $82 million, or 18 cents per share, last year. Analysts expected 21 cents per share, according to FactSet.
Revenue rose 23 percent to $19.74 billion from $16.07 billion. Analysts expected $19.42 billion.
In fiscal 2014, the company expects revenue of $18.1 billion to $19.8 billion. Analysts expect $19.01 billion. It expects an operating loss between $455 million and $55 million in the second quarter compared with operating income of $79 million last year.
In a call with investors, Tom Szkutak, Amazon’s chief financial officer, said the predicted loss is due to investing “heavily” in its international operations as well as other areas of its business, including the content it provides.
In aftermarket trading, Amazon shares rose 35 cents to $337.50, after closing the day up nearly 4 percent at $337.15. The stock reached an all-time high of $408.06 on Jan. 22. Since then, it has dropped 17 percent.