Thursday 16 April 2020

Amazon reaps $11,000-a-second coronavirus lockdown bonanza

Shares reach record high, pushing fortune of CEO and founder Jeff Bezos to $138bn
Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon
 Jeff Bezos has been criticised for not giving more of his fortune to the efforts to tackle the coronavirus. Photograph: Katherine Taylor/Reuters
The online retailer Amazon has been described as a “clear winner” from the coronavirus crisis, its share price surging by more than a third inside a month, its customers spending almost $11,000 a second on its products and services, and its owner, Jeff Bezos, reinforcing his position as the world’s richest person with a fortune of $138bn.
While most businesses have been hit hard by the impact of the pandemic and the looming recession, shares in Amazon have risen to a record high as hundreds of millions people stuck in lockdown conditions turn to the delivery giant to keep them fed and entertained.
Bezos, who started Amazon in his garage in 1994 and still owns 11% of the company’s shares, saw his paper fortune swell by $6.4bn (£5.1bn) on Tuesday alone as Amazon’s shares hit a record $2,283 – valuing the Seattle-based company at $1.14 trillion.
The shares continued to climb on Wednesday and were changing hands at $2,295. One month ago they were changing hands at $1,689.
Bezos, who also owns the Blue Origin company aimed at providing passenger flights into space, has faced criticism for not donating more of his fortune to the efforts to tackle the coronavirus and the economic destruction it is causing.
He has so far handed $100m (£80m) to the food bank charity Feeding America; critics have pointed out that the $100m donation made public by Bezos represents less than 0.1% of his fortune.
Amazon has also been accused of not doing enough to protect its workers from the virus. The company this week fired two employees who criticised Amazon over allegedly unsafe conditions at some of its warehouses.
About 75 Amazon warehouses and delivery workers in the US have been infected with the virus, according to the Washington Post, the newspaper owned by Bezos

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