Amazon stock slips in year-end trade as Evercore flags AMZN for 2026—what’s next

Amazon stock slips in year-end trade as Evercore flags AMZN for 2026—what’s next

NEW YORK, December 31, 2025, 12:10 ET — Regular session

  • Amazon shares fell about 0.5% in midday trade, tracking a softer tone across megacaps.
  • Evercore ISI’s Mark Mahaney reiterated a bullish 2026 view, pointing to AWS momentum.
  • A U.S. appeals court ruling kept Amazon’s NLRB labor fight in focus heading into 2026.

Amazon.com, Inc. shares dipped on Wednesday, down about 0.5% at $231.44 in midday trading.

The muted move matters now because year-end trading typically brings lighter liquidity, making single-stock moves more sensitive to positioning than to fresh fundamentals.

The broader tape stayed cautious on the final U.S. trading day of 2025, with major indexes edging lower in holiday-thinned volumes and U.S. markets set to close on Thursday for New Year’s Day. 1

On the catalyst front, Evercore ISI analyst Mark Mahaney called Amazon his “top pick” for 2026 in a client note. “Top pick” is analyst shorthand for a stock expected to outperform peers or the wider market. 2

Mahaney’s case leans heavily on Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon’s cloud unit and a key profit driver. AWS revenue grew 20% in the third quarter, Reuters reported previously, even as Microsoft’s Azure and Alphabet’s Google Cloud posted faster percentage growth off smaller bases. 3

Investors are also framing the story around capital expenditures, or capex—money spent on data centers, chips and other long-lived assets. Amazon projected higher capital spending next year in its October results, reflecting the cost of building out AI-related infrastructure. 4

That makes upcoming updates on AWS capacity, pricing and margins central for traders trying to handicap whether AI demand translates into higher operating profit, not just higher spending.

Legal and labor risks also remain on the radar. A U.S. appeals court this week said it could not hear Amazon’s challenge to the structure of the National Labor Relations Board, a decision that deepened a split among U.S. appeals courts and left the dispute to proceed through the agency process first. The underlying case involves whether Amazon is a “joint employer” of certain contract drivers—language that can widen a company’s responsibilities under U.S. labor law. 5

For equity investors, the near-term question is whether these legal battles stay compartmentalized—or begin to influence expectations for labor costs, delivery operations and the pace of automation investment.

Trading desks said price action into the close is likely to be shaped by year-end rebalancing and tax positioning, rather than a decisive change in views on Amazon’s fundamentals.

The next major checkpoint is earnings. Amazon is expected to report quarterly results around Feb. 5, according to Nasdaq and Yahoo Finance earnings calendars, a moment when investors typically focus on AWS growth, advertising trends and management’s outlook for 2026 spending. 6

With the New Year holiday interrupting trading, investors will be watching whether the first full week of January brings clearer direction in Amazon shares as liquidity normalizes and portfolios reset.

Stock Market Today

Meta stock faces an AI split: ad gains vs a $135 billion bill

Meta stock faces an AI split: ad gains vs a $135 billion bill

7 February 2026
NEW YORK, Feb 7, 2026, 04:10 (EST) Meta Platforms’ shares slipped 1.3% on Friday as investors weighed signs of stronger AI-driven advertising against a sharp jump in spending that could test the company’s cash generation. The stock last traded at $661.46, valuing Meta at about $1.84 trillion. The push-and-pull comes as U.S. tech giants forecast more than $630 billion in combined spending this year as they double down on artificial intelligence, raising investor scrutiny over whether returns will keep pace. Morgan Stanley analysts warned investors are “not forgiving” about big investments without a clear signal on return on invested capital
IAG share price jumps toward a 52-week peak — what to watch before London reopens

IAG share price jumps toward a 52-week peak — what to watch before London reopens

7 February 2026
IAG shares rose 4.33% to 438.50 pence Friday, near their 52-week high, ahead of full-year results due later this month. The company reported 162,073,135 treasury shares and total voting rights of 4,565,128,012. Brent crude fell 2.2% Thursday to $67.93 a barrel. South Europe Ground Services logged 712,340 operations in 2025 and seeks approval to operate in Portugal.
Binance scoops up 3,600 more Bitcoin for SAFU as BTC whipsaws after brutal selloff

Binance scoops up 3,600 more Bitcoin for SAFU as BTC whipsaws after brutal selloff

7 February 2026
Binance bought 3,600 bitcoin for its Secure Asset Fund, bringing its holdings to 6,230 BTC after bitcoin rebounded above $70,000 following a sharp drop. The broader crypto market lost about $2 trillion since October, with $1 billion in leveraged bitcoin positions liquidated in 24 hours. Strategy reported a wider Q4 loss as bitcoin fell. Gemini will cut up to 200 jobs and exit the UK, EU, and Australia.
Halma share price: Friday’s lift sets up what investors watch next week

Halma share price: Friday’s lift sets up what investors watch next week

7 February 2026
Halma shares closed up 0.7% at 3,548 pence on Friday, valuing the group at about £13.4 billion. The Bank of England held rates at 3.75% in a split vote, keeping rate-cut speculation in focus. Halma’s next trading update is set for March 12. The FTSE 100 ended the week up 0.6%, lifted by bank stocks.
Xometry stock slides about 3.5% in year-end trade; what XMTR investors are watching next
Previous Story

Xometry stock slides about 3.5% in year-end trade; what XMTR investors are watching next

LandBridge stock hits fresh 52-week low as oil heads for biggest annual drop since 2020
Next Story

LandBridge stock hits fresh 52-week low as oil heads for biggest annual drop since 2020

Go toTop