Heavy Growth Puts Drag on Amazon's Bottom Line Big spending and lower-than-expected forecast for the holiday season put a cloud over the e-commerce giant's shares.

By JP Mangalindan

This story originally appeared on Fortune Magazine

Amazon reported a disappointing third quarter on Thursday in the period leading up to holiday season. Investors responded by pummeling the stock in after-hours trading, driving it down 10% to $280 a share. Here are the key points from the earnings report.

What you need to know: Amazon traditionally funnels much of its profits into expanding its already gargantuan business, resulting in razor-thin margins — and this quarter proved no different. The e-commerce giant reported a $437 million loss on revenues of $20.58 billion, a 20% revenue increase year-over-year, but well below Wall Street's estimate of $20.84 billion.

A significant chunk of that money went into content and technology — a spending area that jumped 40%. That's unsurprising given Amazon's announcement last quarter that it would spend over $100 million on original video content, including the well-received original TV show, "Transparent" with "Arrested Development" actor Jeffrey Tambor.

The big numbers: $27.3 billion and $30.3 billion. That's the sales range Amazon expects for this holiday season, the company's busiest time of the year. That represents growth of between 7% and 18% versus last year, but again, less than what analysts forecast.

What you might have missed: Amazon had an extremely busy summer. It acquired Twitch, the video-game streaming site, for $1.1 billion, unveiled a credit card reader for the smartphone called Amazon Local Register and brought its same-day grocery delivery service, Amazon Prime Fresh, to New York. Amazon also launched the Fire phone, which is widely believed to be a dud. On Thursday's earnings call, CFO Tom Szutak suggested it was too early to call the Fire phone a failure given its launch just 90 days ago. Said Szutak: "When ever you launch something new, there's a wide range of outcomes, but it's also early."

JP Mangalindan is a staff writer at Fortune.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Making a Change

Expand Your Language Skills for Life with Babbel, Now at a Special Price

Designed by linguists, Babbel's courses teach real-life conversation skills to help you connect globally.

Starting a Business

The Startup World Glamorizes Young Founders, But These 4 Women Started Businesses After Age 40 — Leading to Hundreds of Millions of Dollars. Here's How.

These women entrepreneurs, now in their 50s, share why growing their businesses at this stage in life is better than ever.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Business News

A Defense Startup With Billions in Contracts Launched a Recruiting Campaign Warning People Not to Work There

Anduril Industries is going viral for its "don't work at Anduril" recruiting campaign.

Business News

'We're Not Effective': Starbucks CEO Tells Corporate Employees to 'Own Whether or Not This Place Grows'

After layoffs, Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol said in an internal meeting that the company's operations had to change.