Leaders | Everything in store

As Amazon turns 30, three factors will define its next decade

It will have to deal with trustbusters, catch up on AI and revive its core business

An Amazon box wrapped with a gold bow
Illustration: Ricardo Rey

About a week ago Amazon joined an exclusive club. Its market value ticked over $2trn, putting it in the company of only four other firms: Alphabet, Apple, Microsoft and Nvidia. In its 30 years Amazon, which began life as an online bookseller in Seattle on July 5th 1994, has been astonishingly successful. Its network of warehouses and vans delivers more packages each year than FedEx or UPS, equivalent to $850bn-worth of goods worldwide. Its pioneering cloud-computing business is used by millions of customers and generates annual revenues of $100bn. Beyond its core operations, it is investing in delivery drones, satellite networks and self-driving cars.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Everything in store”

From the July 6th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

This illustration shows an open book with a yellow background. The left page has a green leaf, a bold "n," text, and a declining graph. Small figures on the right turn a blank page, one holding a large yellow pen.

Lessons from the failure of Northvolt

Governments blew billions on a battery champion. Time to welcome foreign investors instead

How to make a success of peace talks with Vladimir Putin

The key is robust security guarantees for Ukrainians


Black and white photograph of Javier Milei

Javier Milei: “My contempt for the state is infinite”

Argentina’s president is idolised by the Trumpian right. They should get to know him better


Tariff threats will do harm, even if Donald Trump does not impose them

The risk of a trade war is uncomfortably high

Peace in Lebanon is just a start

Donald Trump must build on Joe Biden’s belated success

From Nixon to China, to Trump to Tehran

Iran is weak. For America’s next president that creates an opportunity