Amazon (AMZN) Stock After Recent Pullback Is The Valuation Now Attractive?

Simply Wall St
  • If you are wondering whether Amazon.com stock still offers fair value at today's price, or if you might be overpaying for its story, this article focuses squarely on what the numbers say about valuation.
  • With Amazon.com last closing at US$240.13, the stock has returned 3.2% over the past week, is down 11.3% over the past month, up 6.0% year to date, and up 9.5% over the last year. The three and five year returns sit at 84.4% and 36.8% respectively.
  • Recent moves in Amazon.com stock come against a backdrop of ongoing headlines around the company's role in e commerce and cloud services, as well as broader discussions about large technology companies and regulation. These themes continue to shape how investors think about the balance between growth, risk and valuation for Amazon.com.
  • Amazon.com currently has a valuation score of 4/6, indicating it screens as undervalued on four of six checks. The sections that follow will walk through the main valuation approaches used for the stock and will also point to a broader way of thinking about value at the end of the article.

Amazon.com delivered 9.5% returns over the last year. See how this stacks up to the rest of the Multiline Retail industry.

Approach 1: Amazon.com Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis

A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model estimates what Amazon.com might be worth today by projecting its future cash flows and then discounting those back to a present value using a required return.

For Amazon.com, the model uses a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach. The latest twelve month free cash flow stands at about $37.13b. Analyst estimates are used for the early years, then Simply Wall St extrapolates further out. Within the 10 year projection set, forecast free cash flow for 2030 is $182.41b, with a discounted value of $118.59b in today's terms.

Aggregating these discounted cash flows and the estimated value beyond the explicit forecast period results in an intrinsic value estimate of $423.88 per share. Compared with the recent share price of $240.13, the DCF output implies Amazon.com trades at roughly a 43.3% discount, which screens as materially undervalued on this model alone.

Result: UNDERVALUED

Our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis suggests Amazon.com is undervalued by 43.3%. Track this in your watchlist or portfolio, or discover 42 more high quality undervalued stocks.

AMZN Discounted Cash Flow as at Jun 2026

Head to the Valuation section of our Company Report for more details on how we arrive at this Fair Value for Amazon.com.

Approach 2: Amazon.com Price vs Earnings

For profitable companies like Amazon.com, the P/E ratio is a useful way to relate what you pay for the stock to the earnings the company is currently generating. It helps you see how many dollars of price you are paying for each dollar of earnings.

What counts as a “normal” or “fair” P/E ratio usually reflects two things: how quickly earnings are expected to grow, and how much risk investors see in those earnings. Higher growth or lower perceived risk often justifies a higher P/E multiple, while slower growth or higher risk tends to align with a lower one.

Amazon.com currently trades on a P/E of 28.45x. This is above both the Multiline Retail industry average P/E of 19.44x and the peer group average of 22.68x. Simply Wall St also calculates a proprietary “Fair Ratio” for Amazon.com of 44.74x, which is the P/E level implied by factors such as its earnings growth profile, industry, profit margins, market cap and company specific risks.

This Fair Ratio is more tailored than a simple peer or industry comparison because it explicitly incorporates those company specific drivers. Comparing the current P/E of 28.45x with the Fair Ratio of 44.74x suggests Amazon.com stock screens as undervalued on this multiple based approach.

Result: UNDERVALUED

NasdaqGS:AMZN P/E Ratio as at Jun 2026

P/E ratios tell one story, but what if the real opportunity lies elsewhere? Start investing in legacies, not executives. Discover our 20 top founder-led companies.

Upgrade Your Decision Making: Choose your Amazon.com Narrative

Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation, and on Simply Wall St this is done through Narratives, which let you attach a clear story to your numbers by linking your view on Amazon.com’s business to a specific forecast for revenue, earnings and margins, and then to a fair value that you can compare with today’s price.

In practice, a Narrative is a concise explanation of how you think Amazon.com makes money and what might change, paired with concrete assumptions in a valuation model. Instead of just seeing a DCF or P/E output, you see the story that produced it.

Narratives on Simply Wall St are available in the Community page and are designed to be easy to use. You can browse what millions of other investors are assuming, adopt one that fits your thinking, or tweak the assumptions until the forecast and fair value feel aligned with your own expectations.

Because Narratives connect fair value to the current share price, they can help you decide whether Amazon.com looks cheap, expensive or roughly in line with your expectations on your chosen story. They also update automatically as new information such as earnings, news or guidance is incorporated into the underlying estimates.

Recent Amazon.com Narratives on Simply Wall St, for example, span from a more cautious view with a fair value around US$168.12 per share to a very optimistic view closer to US$475.09. This shows how different investors can look at the same company, plug in different assumptions, and arrive at very different but clearly explained conclusions about value.

For Amazon.com however we will make it really easy for you with previews of two leading Amazon.com Narratives:

🐂 Amazon.com Bull Case

Fair value: US$450.00 per share

Implied undervaluation vs last close: about 46.6% below this fair value based on the Narrative's estimate

Revenue growth assumption: 8.95%

  • The Narrative frames Amazon.com as intentionally holding margins down to fund a large AI, cloud and automation investment cycle that is expected to lift earnings power over time.
  • AWS, advertising and more efficient retail operations are viewed as the key profit engines, with AI tools and custom chips seen as important for long term customer lock in.
  • The author argues the market is underestimating how much operating income Amazon.com could generate once this investment phase matures and margins recover.

🐻 Amazon.com Bear Case

Fair value: US$234.75 per share

Implied overvaluation vs last close: about 2.3% above this fair value based on the Narrative's estimate

Revenue growth assumption: 13.6%

  • This Narrative highlights both positives such as Amazon.com's scale in e commerce, AWS and advertising, and risks such as cloud competition, supply constraints and tariff uncertainty.
  • The author walks through detailed 2Q25 results, including segment level metrics, new customer wins for AWS and updates on projects like Kuiper and new AI tools.
  • On the numbers provided, the fair value sits close to the current share price, with return expectations tied to assumptions about how guidance and long term growth projections play out.

If you want to see the full range of views on Amazon.com, including how other investors connect their stories to fair value estimates and risks, head to the Community Narratives where all of these assumptions are laid out in detail alongside the underlying models.

Do you think there's more to the story for Amazon.com? Head over to our Community to see what others are saying!

NasdaqGS:AMZN 1-Year Stock Price Chart

This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

Valuation is complex, but we're here to simplify it.

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