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Amazon is going all-in on robots.
Internal strategy documents obtained by The New York Times reveal the company's ambitious plans: • Replace 600,000 jobs with robots over the coming years • Automate 75% of operations • Build 40 next-generation robotics warehouses by end of 2027 • Overhaul existing fulfillment centers
This will wipe out thousands of full-time human warehouse jobs over the next decade.
Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak estimates huge savings.
The automation push could deliver $2 billion to $4 billion in annual recurring savings by 2027. That's just a few years away.
Nowak has an "overweight" rating on Amazon with a $300 price target. That implies a 35.1% jump from current levels.
Amazon stock has lagged this year.
Shares are down about 0.3% in 2025. That makes Amazon the worst performer among "Magnificent Seven" tech stocks.
The slump stems partly from light operating income guidance for Q3. Investors have been disappointed with profit projections.
But analysts bullish on Amazon are betting on: • Cloud computing (Amazon Web Services) growth • Retail sales expansion • Online advertising revenue
Nowak believes the market is missing something important.
"Near-term we expect AWS growth to matter most for AMZN shares," he wrote. "However, we continue to believe the market is under-appreciating AMZN's GenAI advances in its Retail business with robotics-driven efficiencies."
Translation? Wall Street is focused on AWS. But Amazon's retail automation could be equally valuable and isn't getting enough credit.
600,000 jobs is a staggering number.
That represents hundreds of thousands of warehouse workers losing employment over the next decade.
Amazon has been one of America's largest employers. These cuts would significantly reduce that workforce.
The company has faced criticism over: • Warehouse working conditions • Injury rates • Union organizing efforts • Pay and benefits
Now many of those workers will be replaced entirely.
Amazon's case for automation is straightforward.
Robots: • Work 24/7 without breaks • Don't call in sick • Don't require healthcare benefits • Don't organize unions • Make fewer errors • Move faster than humans
From a pure business perspective, the math is compelling. $2-4 billion in annual savings funds a lot of other growth initiatives.
This is a glimpse of the future of retail and logistics.
Amazon's scale and ambition mean: • Other retailers will feel pressure to automate • Warehouse jobs will disappear across the industry • Displaced workers need new skills and employment • Economic impacts ripple through communities
The 40 new robotics warehouses by 2027 shows how quickly this transition happens. That's just three years away.
Nowak's bullish case rests on two pillars:
Near-term: AWS growth drives the stock Medium-term: Robotics efficiency in retail becomes a major profit driver
The $2-4 billion in savings by 2027 falls straight to the bottom line. That meaningfully improves Amazon's profitability.
If the market is indeed "under-appreciating" this opportunity, the stock has room to run as investors realize the value.
Amazon is making a massive bet on automation.
Replacing 600,000 human workers with robots over the next decade is one of the largest workforce transformations in corporate history.
For investors, the numbers are attractive. $2-4 billion in annual savings by 2027 is substantial. Amazon's stock has lagged this year, potentially creating a buying opportunity if Nowak is right.
For workers, this is devastating. 600,000 jobs disappearing means: • Lost wages for families • Economic impact on communities near warehouses • Need for retraining and new careers • Questions about social safety nets
For society, this raises big questions: • What happens to displaced workers? • How do communities adapt? • Should companies face restrictions on automation? • What's the role of government in managing this transition?
Amazon isn't alone. Other companies will follow if this works. The warehouse automation trend is just beginning.
The efficiency gains are real. But so is the human cost. Amazon's $4 billion in savings comes from eliminating hundreds of thousands of jobs.
Morgan Stanley sees this as a bullish catalyst for the stock. Labor advocates see it as a looming crisis.
Both are probably right.
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