Amazon has paused some data center lease commitments, Wells Fargo says

Amazon has paused some data center lease commitments, Wells Fargo says


Amazon CEO Andy Jassy speaks at a company event in New York on Feb. 26, 2025. Amazon has rebooted Alexa with artificial intelligence, marking the biggest overhaul of the voice-activated assistant since its introduction over a decade ago. Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Amazon has delayed some commitments around new data center leases, Wells Fargo analysts said on Monday, the latest sign that economic concerns may be affecting tech companies’ spending plans.

A week ago, a Microsoft executive said the software company was slowing down or temporarily holding off on advancing early build-outs. Amazon Web Services and Microsoft are the leading providers of cloud infrastructure, and both have ramped up their capital expenditures in recent quarters to meet the demands of the generative artificial intelligence boom.

“Over the weekend, we heard from several industry sources that AWS has paused a portion of its leasing discussions on the colocation side (particularly international ones),” Wells Fargo analysts wrote in a note. They added that “the positioning is similar to what we’ve heard recently from MSFT,” in that both companies are reeling in some new projects but not canceling signed deals.

Tech stocks have been pressured across the board his year as President Donald Trump’s proposals for widespread tariffs raised the prospect for dramatically higher costs on imports of equipment while also threatening to slow the economy. Cloud infrastructure providers have been aggressively announcing plans to collectively spend hundreds of billions of dollars securing Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs) and building new data centers.

That was before the announcement on tariffs earlier this month. Microsoft and Amazon both report quarterly results next week. Their stock prices were down on Monday, bringing Amazon’s decline for the year to 25% and Microsoft’s drop to 15%.

An AWS spokesperson didn’t immediately provide a comment. Earlier this month, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy told CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin that he did not see the company cutting down on data center construction.

Wells Fargo has a hold rating on Amazon shares.

WATCH: Amazon CEO Andy Jassy letter to shareholders: Generative AI will reinvent every customer experience

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy letter to shareholders: Generative AI will reinvent every customer experience



Source

Intel stock falls 6% after company offers soft first-quarter guidance
Technology

Intel stock falls 6% after company offers soft first-quarter guidance

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan holds a wafer of CPU tiles for the Intel Core Ultra series 3, code-named Panther Lake, outside the Intel Ocotillo campus in Chandler, Arizona. Courtesy: Intel Intel reported fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday that beat Wall Street expectations but offered soft guidance for the current quarter. Shares of the company were down […]

Read More
Microsoft working to fix Outlook email issues
Technology

Microsoft working to fix Outlook email issues

The Microsoft office building is in the RheinauArtOffice in Cologne, Germany, on September 11, 2025. Michael Nguyen | Nurphoto | Getty Images Microsoft said Thursday that it was working to resolve technical issues that were getting in the way of people sending and receiving email messages in its Outlook application. The event happened in the […]

Read More
These 4 turnarounds are making headway – plus, updates on our 30 other stocks
Technology

These 4 turnarounds are making headway – plus, updates on our 30 other stocks

Jim Cramer and Jeff Marks, the Club’s director of portfolio analysis, on Thursday delivered updates on all 34 Club holdings during the January Monthly Meeting. Here are the highlights from the first meeting of 2026, starting with our four turnaround stories: 4 turnaround plays Nike: The apparel and sneaker retailer has shown real signs of […]

Read More