Amazon (AMZN) stock jumped as much as 4.8% in Monday morning trading, hitting an intraday high of $246.76 after opening at $234.21. The move came after a busy weekend of bullish catalysts stacked up across both its retail and cloud businesses.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
Prime Day wrapped up its four-day run with record consumer spending of $26.4 billion, a 9.3% increase from the same event last year, according to Adobe Analytics. This year Amazon shifted the event from July to June to avoid overlap with the FIFA World Cup and the U.S. 250th Independence Day anniversary.
The timing shift also aligned the sale with summer travel demand and back-to-school shopping. BofA Securities noted the move is expected to contribute to a 5% increase in total gross merchandise value.
The stock had been under pressure heading into the week. AMZN dropped more than 14% in June, falling from a high of $270 down to the $232 range. That slide had investors looking for a floor.
Wells Fargo moved to fill that gap. Analyst Ken Gawrelski issued a buy rating on Friday, June 26, with a price target of $312. That implies roughly 35% upside from current levels and an $80-per-share gain for anyone entering around $232.
Citizens also weighed in Monday, reiterating its Market Outperform rating and $315 price target. The firm pointed to a 20% increase in AWS hourly GPU prices set to take effect on July 1 as a concrete sign of strong AI demand and pricing leverage in the cloud.
AWS CEO Matthew Garman referenced clear visibility into demand over the next three to six months. Enterprise clients are signing three-to-five-year capacity agreements, which Citizens says reduces risk and gives AWS a more predictable revenue base.
The firm believes AI adoption is still in early stages and expects demand to hold up even if supply constraints are temporary. Amazon’s revenue grew 14% over the last twelve months, and InvestingPro pegs its Fair Value at $261 against a current price of $233.
The macro backdrop did Amazon no harm. The Nasdaq gained 1.2% Monday and the S&P 500 rose 0.7%, reflecting a broader recovery in risk appetite after a rough prior week when the Nasdaq sold off hard.
Large-cap tech names broadly moved higher, but Amazon had more specific fuel than most.
The combination of record Prime Day results, two bullish analyst calls, and the AWS GPU price hike gave investors three distinct reasons to step back in. Investors are now watching the next quarterly earnings report closely to see whether these catalysts translate to the bottom line.
The post Amazon (AMZN) Stock Jumps 5% as Prime Day Breaks Records and Analysts Pile In appeared first on CoinCentral.

