Amazon's reveals its Prime service has 100 million members

AP  |  San Francisco 

has persuaded more than 100 million shoppers to subscribe to its service that offers free two-day shipping and other perks that help bind people to the company and its ever-expanding empire.

The scope of Prime's success stunned even the most optimistic of analysts, such as GBH Insights' He had previously estimated had 92 million subscribers.

"It's a mind-boggling number that serves as a key barometer to how big Amazon's kingdom has become," Ives said.

has been selling annual memberships to get bargains on goods stocked in its warehouses for decades, and already been outdone by Amazon's service. has 50.4 million memberships that allow 92 million cardholders to shop in its warehouse and website.

still isn't the of digital subscriptions, though. has 125 million worldwide subscribers who, on average, pay about $120 annually to watch its video-streaming service, based on numbers the company released with its quarterly earnings earlier this week.

Although providing free two-day shipping to orders obviously drives up Amazon's costs, the service so far has proven to be worth the expense. Ives estimates that members typically spend twice as much at than non-members.

The service also helps spur sales of Amazon's with its digital assistant, The device makes it easier to shop online and gives the company a toehold in homes.

also is leveraging to spur more sales at Whole Foods, the that it acquired last year, by offering two-hour delivery of groceries to the service's subscribers.

serves as a "competitive moat" that makes it more difficult for other retailers, online and offline, to get people to shop at their stores instead of Amazon, Ives said.

"It has become a golden ticket for Amazon," he said.

All those factors have helped make give a market value about $740 billion. Only Apple, at about $900 billion, and Google's corporate parent, at about $745 billion, are currently worth more.

has recently attacked as an economic scourge, deriding the company as a tax dodger and an abusive customer of the That has raised worries the might take action that could crimp Amazon's growth, but the growing popularity of the service could make that a politically unpopular move.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 19 2018. 08:55 IST