Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    This seasoned tactician is exposing the hoopla around stablecoins.

    October 16, 2025

    In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.

    October 16, 2025

    Appaloosa and Soros increase their investment in Nvidia. They also purchased this dilapidated stock, which is currently rising.

    October 16, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    🔴
    Trending
    • This seasoned tactician is exposing the hoopla around stablecoins.
    • In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.
    • Appaloosa and Soros increase their investment in Nvidia. They also purchased this dilapidated stock, which is currently rising.
    • AI is driving up these equities, yet none of them are in the technology sector. This is what’s happening.
    • Do internet pharmacies offer lower prices than your neighborhood pharmacy? How to make the best financial and medical decisions.
    • Prescription medication vending devices will soon be available on Amazon. What might go wrong?
    • Walmart’s cooperation with OpenAI in shopping made them the Dow’s largest gainer today.
    • As the Pentagon calls on missile providers to boost output, the analyst advises buying these stocks.
    BourseWatch – Latest Daily Stock Market And Finance NewsBourseWatch – Latest Daily Stock Market And Finance News
    • HOME
    • TOOLS
      • CURRENCY CONVERTER
      • RANKING TABLE
      • STOCK SCREENER
      • FOREX HEATMAP
      • ECONOMIC CALENDER
      • REAL-TIME CHART
      • FOREX SUMMARY
    • MARKET
      1. COMMODITIES
      2. REAL ESTATE
      3. CRYPTO CURRENCIES
      4. CURRENCY / FOREX
      5. ETF / RTF
      6. EQUITIES
      7. INDEXES
      8. View All

      Labor Day gas prices are lower than usual, but these wild cards could still fuel a spike

      September 2, 2025

      A new struggle for global market share is developing, which is why oil prices are rising.

      July 25, 2025

      Why the oil market’s surge following Russia’s “Pearl Harbor” incident might not last

      June 17, 2025

      The price of silver just reached a 13-year high. There may be more advantages to come.

      June 17, 2025

      Cardi B and Nicki Minaj, two rappers who are at odds, do share one thing: Purchasing real estate

      October 14, 2025

      Now that the Fed has started cutting rates, how low could they go? Economists have their say.

      September 19, 2025

      We have saved and invested $1 million in high-yield savings and CDs so that we can buy a house. If the Fed lowers rates, should we move our money?

      September 17, 2025

      Builders ramp up price cuts on new homes to five-year high. They’re hoping a rate cut will rescue them.

      September 17, 2025

      The prices of many crypto-treasury firms are below the value of their digital assets. Is this a good deal or a serious warning sign?

      September 29, 2025

      The dollar might continue to be the most valuable reserve currency in the world with stablecoins, but not by purchasing Treasury bills.

      September 11, 2025

      “The Rise of Bitcoin: Wall Street CEO Forecasts a 3,000% Surge, Backed by ETF Approvals and Key Market Trends”

      August 12, 2025

      A “golden cross” appears on Coinbase’s shares. Why it might not be a bullish indication to purchase.

      June 22, 2025

      According to a Goldman research, this is the point at which the 10-year Treasury yield poses a “clear problem” for equities.

      May 3, 2024

      ETFs with private credit have arrived. Why they might target your retirement account next.

      September 5, 2025

      Inside the 2025 ETF boom: “How do you manage it all?”

      September 5, 2025

      Challenges Loom for China’s Stock Market as ETF Experts Warn of Investor Hesitancy

      August 12, 2025

      These bond funds protect you from fluctuations in interest rates, but there’s a fee.

      June 20, 2025

      Challenges for Tech Giants: Microsoft, Google, and AMD Stocks Take a Hit Despite Strong Earnings

      June 22, 2024

      ECB’s Villeroy Affirms: Oil Uncertainty No Barrier to June Rate Cut

      April 29, 2024

      Federal Reserve’s Move Leaves Regional Banks in a Quandary for 2024

      April 29, 2024

      Israel’s Credit Rating Takes a Dive: S&P Warns of Military Escalation with Iran

      April 29, 2024

      This seasoned tactician is exposing the hoopla around stablecoins.

      October 16, 2025

      Appaloosa and Soros increase their investment in Nvidia. They also purchased this dilapidated stock, which is currently rising.

      October 16, 2025

      AI is driving up these equities, yet none of them are in the technology sector. This is what’s happening.

      October 16, 2025

      As the “high-stakes game of chicken” between the United States and China commences, investors should prepare for increased trade war volatility.

      October 14, 2025
    • ECONOMY
      1. INTEREST RATE
      2. View All

      A watchdog group says the IRS has only made “limited progress” in figuring out how often people making less than $400,000 are audited.

      September 3, 2025

      Like Trump, Kamala Harris wants to keep tip taxes low. Some people think the idea is “very silly,” and it doesn’t matter who comes up with it.

      August 19, 2025

      When Is the Best Time to Change a Roth IRA? Make the Most of This Tax-Smart Move

      August 12, 2025

      Tim Walz gave Minnesota “the most progressive tax system in the country.” Find out what that might mean for Kamala Harris’s tax ideas for 2025.

      August 12, 2025

      Here is the current status of Trump’s tariffs as new timber, cabinet, and furniture levies are implemented.

      October 14, 2025

      The Sino-American trade war establishes a new battleground, this time at sea.

      October 14, 2025

      Government shutdown means Fed lacks crucial data as it considers rate cuts

      October 3, 2025

      What is the potential cost of the government shutdown? These figures illustrate the possible financial impact.

      September 30, 2025
    • NEWS
      1. ALL NEWS
      2. COMPANIES
      3. CURRENCY FOREX
      4. INDEXES
      5. View All

      Biden’s Antitrust Wins Cast Shadow on Corporate Mergers in 2024

      August 12, 2025

      Trump’s 10% Tariff Plan Echoes Nixon’s 1971 Strategy: A Closer Look at the Historical Precedent

      April 6, 2025

      Groundbreaking Partnership: Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi Unveils Revolutionary Hydropower and Irrigation Venture in Sri Lanka

      April 2, 2025

      Binance Bombshell: Founder Faces 36 Months in U.S. Jail for Money Laundering Violations

      April 2, 2025

      In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.

      October 16, 2025

      Prescription medication vending devices will soon be available on Amazon. What might go wrong?

      October 16, 2025

      Walmart’s cooperation with OpenAI in shopping made them the Dow’s largest gainer today.

      October 15, 2025

      As the Pentagon calls on missile providers to boost output, the analyst advises buying these stocks.

      October 15, 2025

      China Securities Regulator Halts Restricted Share Lending in Move to Stabilize Stock Markets

      August 14, 2025

      Global Markets Wobble as China’s Evergrande Faces Liquidation, Federal Reserve Meeting Looms

      June 22, 2024

      China’s Stock Slump and Currency Plunge Cloud Asia’s Rate Cut Optimism

      March 22, 2024

      Mexican Peso Ascends to Unprecedented Heights, Instilling Fear in Investors

      March 15, 2024

      4 Must-Have Growth Stocks to Seize After Nasdaq Bear-Market Downturn

      August 11, 2025

      Traders Anticipate ‘Once-in-a-Generation’ Opportunity in Emerging Markets as Federal Reserve Hints at Rate Cuts

      April 6, 2025

      LSEG Shareholders Face Showdown: Vote on Doubling CEO’s Potential Pay

      April 2, 2025

      Critical Week for Stock Market as $10 Trillion in Big Tech Earnings Shape S&P 500’s Fate

      March 2, 2025

      In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.

      October 16, 2025

      Do internet pharmacies offer lower prices than your neighborhood pharmacy? How to make the best financial and medical decisions.

      October 16, 2025

      Prescription medication vending devices will soon be available on Amazon. What might go wrong?

      October 16, 2025

      Walmart’s cooperation with OpenAI in shopping made them the Dow’s largest gainer today.

      October 15, 2025
    • LIST & RANKING

      The force behind the recent surge in stocks is Big Tech, not the Fed. What investors should know is as follows.

      June 16, 2024

      Top 25 Independent Advisors

      February 27, 2024

      Top CEO’s of the Year

      January 18, 2024

      The Best Online Brokers

      January 18, 2024

      The Most Profitable Businesses

      January 18, 2024
    Donate
    BourseWatch – Latest Daily Stock Market And Finance NewsBourseWatch – Latest Daily Stock Market And Finance News
    Home » When Amazon Prime Big Deal Days come back, here’s why more people than ever are shopping on the site:
    Companies

    When Amazon Prime Big Deal Days come back, here’s why more people than ever are shopping on the site:

    A record 83% of U.S. households now shop with Amazon, which analysts say is directly related to the company’s push into everyday essentials
    October 8, 2024No Comments
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    im 98302513
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Many Amazon Prime members will be looking forward to the company’s Prime Big Deal Days sales event on Oct. 8 and 9. They will be hoping to save money on expensive items like big-screen TVs, imported coffee makers, and the newest gaming systems.

    But more and more people are buying household things like laundry detergent, batteries, and toilet paper on Amazon AMZN -3.06% at the moment. It is promoting that area through its Prime sales event, which also has deals on more expensive items.

    Analysts and experts who spoke with MarketWatch say that this is making Amazon, a company that already makes about $600 billion a year from all of its businesses, an even stronger force in global shopping. In its early years, almost 30 years ago, the company started out as an online shop but has since grown to sell many other things as well.

    Sam Bloom, head of partnerships at PMG, said, “You’re seeing a behavior change right in front of our eyes.” He meant that Amazon shoppers are becoming more and more likely to use the site for everyday things.

    This point is supported by a new PMG study that shows that during Amazon’s recent July Prime Day event, the health and household area saw its share of sales rise, while categories like electronics and clothing and accessories fell.

    Numerator, a market researcher, also said that during previous Prime events, cat food and dish soap were among Amazon’s best-selling items. Amazon has also been advertising deals on lightbulbs, medicines, and cat litter before the October Prime Big Deal Days sale, which is like the July event but before the holidays.

    But another number from Numerator may really tell the tale: an all-time high 83% of U.S. families now shop on Amazon. It was only 76% four years ago.

    Also, it’s important to note that Amazon now has about 200 million Prime users around the world, according to numbers the company released in 2021. Amazon said that there were 100 million Prime users in 2018.

    There is growth at Amazon even though it has to deal with competition from another big store in the online market. For example, Walmart WMT -2.27% started its Walmart+ membership program in 2020. It has perks like Amazon Prime, like free shipping. Target TGT -2.54% recently joined the club with its Target Circle 360.

    Analysts stress that Amazon’s growth, at least in terms of home penetration, is directly linked to its move into selling household goods. That is, people are more likely to shop at Amazon because it sells basic items, just like they did with traditional stores for many years.

    “It’s like a grocery store,” says Bruce Winder, a retail expert.

    Some people think Amazon will have trouble in the future, especially since home goods have lower profit margins than many other types of goods. But that hasn’t stopped the trend.

    Amazon’s CFO Brian T. Olsavsky said earlier this year that people are buying “a lot more consumables and everyday essentials.”

    A lot of people, including analysts, say that Amazon’s success at selling household goods comes from three main things: the range, the prices, and the speed of delivery.

    The part about choices is pretty clear to anyone who has shopped on Amazon. Not only does the company sell those products, but it also sells a pretty wide range of them. That being said, the company says it gives 300 million items, both necessities and extras, with free Prime shipping.

    People can choose from a lot of well-known brands of toilet paper, like Scott, Charmin, and more. They can also stick with Amazon’s own Basics brand. More than 100,000 of these six-packs have been bought on Amazon in the last month alone, making them the best-selling health and home item.

    ‘You’re seeing a behavioral change right before our eyes.’

    Sam Bloom, PMG’s head of partnerships

    The story is more than just choosing, though. People may also be drawn to Amazon because of its low prices. An e-commerce researcher named Profitero did a study that showed Amazon is the cheapest place to buy many important things online, like vitamins and baby goods. Walmart was usually the second best option in these situations, but Amazon was 1% to 4% cheaper. (Walmart officials didn’t answer multiple calls for comment.)

    In fact, some experts say that Amazon’s shipping time might be what brings in the most customers. The company has built up a large network of warehouses and delivery trucks that help it get things to customers faster. As proof, Amazon says that in the first half of 2024, more than 5 billion things arrived the same day or the next day around the world, which was 30% faster than the same time last year.

    People are more likely to buy even one item of, say, dish soap on Amazon because of this. The argument goes like this: Why go to a store in person when the item will be delivered to your door in hours and you already paid for a Prime membership that includes free shipping?

    Amazon can ship those things for a low cost thanks to the delivery network. Laura Martin, an internet expert at Needham & Company, says that Amazon already has the trucks and workers it needs, so adding another package, even if it’s just that one with the dish soap, doesn’t really make the costs go up. It still makes some money, though.

    Martin pointed to the well-known dish soap brand and said, “They’re happy to sell you that Palmolive.”

    It’s not that Amazon doesn’t have problems here. The profit-margin problem may be the most important one.

    Gil Luria, an analyst at D.A. Davidson who studies Amazon, explained it this way: “A box of dishwasher detergent could make $4 of profit and a gaming console could make $100 of profit at the same 20% markup and the same box size.”

    When Amazon revealed that its revenue for the second quarter of 2024 would be lower than what analysts had expected, Olsavsky said that this was because customers were “being careful with their spend,” which again may favor everyday necessities over non-essentials.

    It was clear that investors didn’t like that possibility: the company’s stock dropped about 20% in the days that followed, but it has since risen again. Some experts think that shoppers might be more generous with their money this holiday season. It’s also important to remember that Amazon’s October sales event will include more than just necessities; it will also include more expensive items.

    Other people, including customers, see a different problem with Amazon sending out all those billions of packages. Specifically, the damage that could be done to the earth by all the fuel and packaging that is used.

    A person from Norwalk, Connecticut, named Ann Magnin said, “There is definitely a downside.” Magnin doesn’t shop on Amazon.

    Amazon defends its environmental record by pointing to recent steps it has taken to lessen its effect on the world, such as using paper filler instead of 95% of the plastic air pillows in North American delivery boxes.

    “We do both every day,” an Amazon spokesperson said. “We can innovate for customers and advance sustainability initiatives at the same time.”

    Some analysts say that Amazon’s growth chances may be more important than its ability to make customers depend on it more and more, for everything from basic needs to more complex items. AWS, the company’s cloud platform, and other parts of its business have become more important. “Amazon is a services company (i.e., advertising, cloud, Prime Video, etc.), NOT a products company, and e-commerce is all about products,” Martin, a Needham analyst, wrote not long ago.

    But try saying that to Marla White, who lives in Southern California and buys vitamins, laundry detergent, and dog supplies on Amazon.the list of important things goes on and on. When White is in a hurry and needs something fast, she says she can get it delivered the same day through Amazon.

    She said, “I’m like, ‘God love you.'”

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.

    October 16, 2025

    Prescription medication vending devices will soon be available on Amazon. What might go wrong?

    October 16, 2025

    Walmart’s cooperation with OpenAI in shopping made them the Dow’s largest gainer today.

    October 15, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Aeries Technology: A Global Professional Services Leader in Business Transformation

    June 10, 2024

    As Christmas sales break records, stock buybacks soar.

    December 5, 2024

    These other stocks, along with Coinbase and Block, could join the S&P 500 in the next shake-up.

    December 6, 2024

    Why Powell and the Fed should stop lowering interest rates in December

    December 7, 2024
    Don't Miss
    Market

    This seasoned tactician is exposing the hoopla around stablecoins.

    October 16, 2025

    Although there are supporters of stablecoins, an experienced strategist claims that the buzz around them…

    In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.

    October 16, 2025

    Appaloosa and Soros increase their investment in Nvidia. They also purchased this dilapidated stock, which is currently rising.

    October 16, 2025

    AI is driving up these equities, yet none of them are in the technology sector. This is what’s happening.

    October 16, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Instagram

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Update

    Facebook Twitter Instagram

    BourseWatch

    • All News
    • Economy
    • List & Ranking
    • Market
    • News

    Recent Post

    • im 05200118
      This seasoned tactician is exposing the hoopla around stablecoins.
    • im 92986172
      In just three years, this AI stock has increased 1,600%, and Deutsche Bank anticipates further gains.
    • im 66507704
      Appaloosa and Soros increase their investment in Nvidia. They also purchased this dilapidated stock, which is currently rising.

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from BourseWatch

    © Boursewatch. Designed by Asad Rizvi

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.