How are AMZN's international sales growing? We can pull the data out of the SEC filings...
The raw data consists of total revenues, and percentage that are international. Amazon's revenues are familiar to all:
HISTORICAL QUARTERLY RESULTS REVENUE (Thousands of U.S. Dollars) 1996 1997 1998 1999 1st Qtr MAR 875 16,005 87,361 293,643 2nd Qtr JUN 2,230 27,855 116,044 314,377* 3rd Qtr SEP 4,173 37,887 153,698 4th Qtr DEC 8,468 66,040 252,893
The international sales percentages were wonderfully easy to locate:
1Q98, 1Q97: International sales represented 21% and 28% of net sales for the quarters ended March 31, 1998 and 1997, respectively. edgar-online.com
1Q99, 1Q98: International sales, including export sales from the United States, represented 22% and 21% of net sales for the quarters ended March 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. biz.yahoo.com
2Q97, 2Q96: International sales represented 28% and 37% of net sales for the quarters ended June 30, 1997 and 1996, respectively, and 28% and 38% of net sales for the six months ended June 30, 1997 and 1996, respectively. edgar-online.com
2Q98, 2Q97: International sales represented 22% and 28% of net sales for the quarters ended June 30, 1998 and 1997, respectively, and 21% and 28% of net sales for the six months ended June 30, 1998 and 1997, respectively. biz.yahoo.com
3Q97, 3Q96: International sales represented 26% and 35% of net sales for the quarters ended September 30, 1997 and 1996, respectively, and 27% and 36% of net sales for the nine months ended September 30, 1997 and 1996, respectively. edgar-online.com
3Q98, 3Q97: International sales represented 20% and 26% of net sales for the quarters ended September 30, 1998 and 1997, respectively, and 21% and 27% of net sales for the nine months ended September 30, 1998 and 1997, respectively.
1996, 1995: International sales represented approximately 39% and 33% of net sales in 1995 and 1996, respectively. edgar-online.com
1998, 1997 1996: International sales, including export sales from the United States, represented approximately 20%, 25% and 33% of net sales for the years ended December 31, 1998, 1997 and 1996, respectively. biz.yahoo.com
The above links are all to SEC filings. The 2Q99 filing isn't available to me, so my international analysis has to stop with 1Q99. But the above figures are sufficient to compute international and domestic sales for the rest of the quarters, from the above sources, the percentages marked with "c" are calculated from the above data. The 2Q99 international percentage is my guess. We will know when the SEC filing happens.
1996 Int 1997 Int 1998 Int 1999 Int ----- --- ------ --- ------- --- ------- --- 1Q 875 41%c 16,005 28% 87,361 21% 293,643 22% 2Q 2,230 37% 27,855 28% 116,044 22% 314,377 23%E 3Q 4,173 35% 37,887 26% 153,698 20% 4Q 8,468 30%c 66,040 22%c 252,893 19%c ------ --- ------- --- ------- --- -------- Yr 15,746 33% 147,787 25% 609,996 20%
One is then able to fill in the missing data, and get both US and international sales. Of course there are rounding errors, but the data should be good to almost two decimal places. I have estimated the 2Q99 figures as 23% international.
International / US sales:
1996 1997 1998 1999 Intr. U.S. Intr. U.S. Intr. U.S. Intr. U.S. ----- ------ ------ ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- 1Q 359 516 4,481 11,524 18,346 69,015 64,601 229,042 2Q 825 1,405 7,799 20,056 25,530 90,514 72,307E 242,070E 3Q 1,461 2,712 9,851 28,036 30,740 122,958 4Q 2,551 5,917 14,816 51,224 47,383 205,510 ----- ------ ------ ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- Yr 5,196 10,550 36,947 110,840 121,999 487,997
The first thing to notice is that international sales as a percentage of total sales has been falling trending down since 1Q96. I interpret this to mean that AMZN has been able to find acceptance in the US more readily than overseas. This is probably due to international shipping (and perhaps duty) costs.
The second thing to notice is that international sales are slightly below trend for the fourth quarters, while above trend for the other quarters. This is, no doubt, a seasonality effect. Maybe I will do a trend analysis on the international and US sales separately...
-- Carl |