What to Expect From Amazon’s E-commerce Business in 2022

Despite strong performance in its cloud computing and advertising businesses, Amazon’s  (AMZN) – Get Amazon.com, Inc. Report stock ended 2021 with a gain of less than 7%. The main culprit appears to be the company’s weaker-than-expected e-commerce sales, which have a huge impact on the stock.

Since the e-commerce industry as a whole is poised to keep expanding, let’s dig deeper into Amazon’s e-commerce revenue projections for 2022 and what we can expect from Amazon stock in 2022.

Will Online Sales Grow in the U.S.?

Here in the U.S., Amazon is the undisputed leader of the online retail industry. Data from Statista shows the Seattle-based company held 41% of the U.S.e-commerce market in 2021.

In 2020, online sales skyrocketed as people stayed at home due to COVID-19 and replaced trips to the shopping mall with visits to Amazon’s site. But when brick-and-mortar businesses began reopening in 2021,

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Amazon shareholders are calling for independent audit of how the company treats workers

Citing the recent scrutiny on its employees’ working conditions, a group of Amazon shareholders has filed a resolution asking the board of directors to commission an independent audit on workplace health and safety at the company. The resolution calls for the audit to be conducted with input from Amazon employees and experts in workplace safety and surveillance.

“As Amazon strives to be ‘the Earth’s Safest Place to Work,’ a review is needed of the practices that have made the company a leader in workplace injuries and a target for criticism and regulation,” the shareholders’ resolution reads. “With surveillance and productivity quotas linked to high injury rates, we urge Amazon to commission an independent audit of these practices.”

If Amazon doesn’t challenge the resolution, shareholders will vote on it at the company’s annual shareholder meeting in May.

Mary Beth Gallagher is director of engagement at Domini Impact Investments, which filed the

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If You’d Invested $5,000 in Amazon in 2015, This Is How Much You Would Have Today

Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) has generated massive multibagger gains since its initial public offering (IPO) on May 15, 1997. The stock went public at $18, or a split-adjusted price of $1.50 per share. If you had invested just $5,000 in that IPO, your stake would be worth nearly $11.4 million today.

Investors might be kicking themselves for missing out on those life-changing returns, but Amazon has also generated multibagger gains for investors who bought shares long after it became the 800-pound gorilla of the e-commerce market. In fact, a $5,000 investment in Amazon on the first trading day of 2015 would still be worth about $55,000 today.

Let’s see why Amazon experienced such a growth spurt over the past seven years, and if that momentum will continue in the future.

An Amazon driver checks a delivery.

Image source: Amazon.

What happened in 2015?

2015 marked an inflection point for Amazon because the company finally started breaking out Amazon

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Amazon Insiders and Documents Suggest Changes to Employee Pay

  • Amazon insiders and documents suggest the company may be planning to change how it pays employees.
  • One insider said Amazon had considered stock awards to up total pay for some employees by 25 to 40%.
  • Amazon is facing what some call an “exodus” of senior talent and growing dissatisfaction with pay.

Some Amazon insiders are expecting the company to change the way it pays employees as it faces what some call an “exodus” of senior talent and growing dissatisfaction with pay.

The company has considered measures including special stock awards, higher counteroffers, and an internal tool to identify when employees are dissatisfied at the company, according to current and former employees and documents viewed by Insider.

One Amazon insider said at least one part of the company once considered special stock awards that vest every six months over 30 months to increase the total compensation of some employees by 25

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Amazon has mostly avoided antitrust scrutiny, but that may change in 2022

Amazon.com Inc. has largely escaped the gaze of lawmakers in the antitrust battle, but that is changing rapidly and could lead to some challenges in 2022.

Congress and the Federal Trade Commission have Amazon in their collective crosshairs entering 2022. While new bills target Amazon’s online-sales practices, a longtime antagonist sits atop the FTC as it decides how to best keep the e-commerce leader in check.

A bill from U.S. Sens. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., and and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, seemingly takes direct aim at Amazon
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and Apple Inc.
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The American Innovation and Choice Online Act would ban dominant online platforms from favoring their own products or services, a practice known as self-preferencing.

The legislation, which could greatly affect searches provided to users by Amazon and Alphabet Inc.’s Google
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would bar dominant platforms from discriminating among business users in a way

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