Updated: Nov 7, 2025
Summary (TL;DR)
- Price action: Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) closed at $244.41 after trading between $238.50–$245.45.
- Retail push: Amazon expanded its ultra–low-price shopping experience Amazon Bazaar to 14 new markets, intensifying its battle with Shein and Temu. [1]
- Cloud & AI:AWS announced “Fastnet,” a high‑capacity subsea cable linking Maryland and Ireland to bolster AI and cloud reliability. [2]
- Legal:Jeff Bezos prevailed on appeal in a Delaware Supreme Court case tied to an investor lawsuit; the lower court ruling was affirmed. [3]
- Capacity build‑out: Reported $700M land purchase in Northern Virginia underscores ongoing data‑center expansion. [4]
- Policy watch: The EU is weighing tweaks and grace periods to its landmark AI Act—potentially easing near‑term compliance pressure on Big Tech, including AWS. [5]
AMZN price snapshot (Nov 7, 2025)
Amazon shares finished the session at $244.41 (+0.6% vs. prior close), with heavy volume and an intraday range from $238.50 to $245.45.
What moved Amazon stock today
1) Amazon Bazaar goes global
Amazon said it expanded its low‑cost e‑commerce experience—branded Amazon Bazaar—to 14 additional markets, after earlier testing the “Haul” concept in the U.S. and select countries. Products are mostly under $10, aimed squarely at value shoppers and at rivals Shein and Temu. Early coverage lists new markets including Hong Kong, Taiwan, the Philippines, Kuwait, Qatar, Nigeria, and Peru. [6]
On its newsroom hub, Amazon framed the move as more than doubling Bazaar’s global reach from prior pilots. [7]
Read‑through for investors: This is Amazon leaning into international GMV growth and price-sensitive cohorts. Near‑term margin dilution is possible, but the strategy could widen the funnel for advertising and Prime over time. Some e‑commerce peers traded lower on competitive concerns. [8]
2) AWS announces “Fastnet” transatlantic cable
AWS Fastnet is a planned high‑capacity subsea cable connecting Maryland and County Cork (Ireland), designed for network diversity and AI workload resilience. Capacity is cited above 320 Tbps, with go‑live targeted for 2028. Building outside traditional corridors should add redundancies for cloud and AI traffic. [9]
Amazon’s newsroom also highlighted the project this week as part of a string of infrastructure updates. Implication: better reliability for AI training/inference and Europe–U.S. cloud traffic—supportive to AWS backlog and large AI contracts. [10]
3) Bezos wins appeal in Delaware
In Cleveland Bakers & Teamsters Pension Fund v. Bezos et al., the Delaware Supreme Court on Nov 7 affirmed the Court of Chancery’s earlier decision, a procedural win for Jeff Bezos and other Amazon directors. While the short order doesn’t delve into merits, Bloomberg Law reports the case stemmed from an investor challenge tied to Bezos’s space rivalry narrative. Takeaway: removes a modest headline overhang. [11]
4) Data‑center land grab in Northern Virginia
Trade press reports Amazon spent $700 million for ~189 acres at Devlin Tech Park near Bristow, VA, entitled for millions of square feet of data‑center development and three substations—consistent with Amazon’s multiyear commitment to build out NoVA capacity. [12]
5) Policy backdrop: EU signals softer AI rules
Multiple outlets report the European Commission is considering grace periods and regulatory “simplification” for parts of the AI Act (e.g., a one‑year delay for certain requirements and later timelines for transparency fines). For hyperscalers like AWS, any near‑term easing can temper compliance risk as AI services scale in the EU. Final decisions are expected later in November. [13]
Don’t lose the thread: why AI still dominates the AMZN story
Earlier this week, OpenAI and AWS unveiled a multi‑year partnership (widely reported as a $38B/7‑year compute deal) granting OpenAI access to hundreds of thousands of Nvidia GPUs and scalable CPUs on AWS. The agreement helped push AMZN to record territory and re‑center the AI narrative around AWS’s infrastructure leadership. [14]
Investor angle: Fastnet + data‑center land + the OpenAI contract paint a consistent picture—Amazon is aggressively underwriting AI capacity to defend share and margin in cloud, which continues to be the primary valuation lever for AMZN. [15]
What to watch next
- Adoption metrics and delivery SLAs for Bazaar as the experience rolls out across new markets. [16]
- AWS deal flow/backlog disclosures tied to large AI customers following the OpenAI news. [17]
- EU AI Act deliberations in mid‑November and any final text affecting foundation‑model providers and deployers. [18]
- U.S. data‑center permitting and power constraints in Northern Virginia, given the scale of planned builds. [19]
Bottom line for Nov 7, 2025
AMZN closed higher as the retail flywheel (Bazaar) and the cloud/AI flywheel (Fastnet + OpenAI) both spun in the same direction, while a Bezos legal win and potential EU rule softening reduced headline and regulatory friction at the margins. The near‑term debate remains about mix and margins in retail vs. capex payback in AI infrastructure—but today’s tape and news flow were generally constructive for the long‑term thesis. [20]
Disclosure: This article is for information only and does not constitute investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any security.
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.rcrwireless.com, 3. courts.delaware.gov, 4. commercialobserver.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.aboutamazon.com, 8. www.investors.com, 9. www.rcrwireless.com, 10. www.aboutamazon.com, 11. courts.delaware.gov, 12. commercialobserver.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. openai.com, 15. www.rcrwireless.com, 16. www.aboutamazon.com, 17. openai.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. commercialobserver.com, 20. www.reuters.com


