Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) is a stock worth owning for decades because the cash engines underneath the retail storefront, AWS, advertising, and Prime, throw off compounding profits no single recession or product cycle can break.
For a retirement-focused investor who has been burned chasing trends, the case here rests on the boring math of a business whose high-margin segments keep getting bigger while the low-margin pieces fund the moat.
Pillar 1: Durability Built on Multiple High-Margin Engines
Look past the warehouses. AWS posted $37.587 billion in Q1 2026 revenue, growing 28% year over year at a 37.7% operating margin, its fastest pace in 15 quarters. Advertising Services reached over $70 billion in trailing-twelve-month revenue, growing 24%. Subscription Services, mostly Prime, added another $13.427 billion at 15% growth. Three recurring, sticky, high-margin businesses now sit on top of the world’s largest e-commerce platform.
Customer concentration risk is minimal. AWS counts OpenAI, Anthropic, and Meta among landmark compute customers, while Amazon’s own chip business crossed a $20 billion annual revenue run rate, growing triple digits.
Pillar 2: Compounding Without a Dividend
Amazon pays no dividend, and for a retiree that is the point: every dollar of profit gets plowed back. Full-year 2025 operating cash flow hit $139.51 billion, up 20.4%, and net income reached $77.67 billion on revenue of $716.92 billion. Shareholders’ equity grew 44.48% year over year to $441.914 billion. Return on equity sits at 24.3%. That is the income, paid as a permanently larger ownership stake in a business whose earnings power keeps expanding.
Pillar 3: Surviving Every Cycle
Amazon sits on $101.816 billion in cash with interest coverage of 35.17x and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.37. The business spans cloud, advertising, retail, subscriptions, logistics, and now satellite broadband. When one segment slows, others carry. The North America operating margin expanded from 6.3% to 7.9% year over year, and international operating income grew 40%. Analyst sentiment reflects the durability: 62 of 66 ratings are Buy or Strong Buy, with zero sells.
The One Scenario Where It Underperforms
Capital intensity. Q1 2026 capex jumped 76.68% to $44.203 billion, and management plans roughly $200 billion in 2026 capex. Trailing free cash flow has compressed to about $1.2 billion. In a year where rates spike and AI returns lag, the stock can absolutely lag the broader market, as it already has over the past month, down 8.1%.
That does not break the forever thesis. The spending is buying the next decade of AWS compute, custom silicon, and robotics capacity. CEO Andy Jassy framed it directly: “We expect to invest about $200 billion in capital expenditures across Amazon in 2026, and anticipate strong long-term return on invested capital.” A retiree owning Amazon is, in effect, letting management compound at 24.3% returns on equity instead of paying it out.
Over the last decade, Amazon shares are up 589.2% on a split-adjusted basis, through two corrections, a pandemic, a rate-hike cycle, and an FTC fight. That is the track record of something proven, not promised.
For long-term holders, this is the kind of position that goes in the back of the portfolio and stays untouched.