Photo: New York Post
Amazon founder and chairman Jeff Bezos has sold nearly 3 million shares of Amazon stock, worth $665.8 million, over a two-day period in July, according to a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) released Tuesday. This transaction is part of a pre-arranged trading plan that was publicly disclosed earlier this year.
The plan outlines Bezos’ intention to sell up to 25 million Amazon shares by May 2026, a move that—if executed in full—would be valued at over $4.9 billion based on current market prices.
Despite this significant divestment, Bezos remains Amazon’s largest individual shareholder, holding over 900 million shares, a stake valued at nearly $200 billion. While he stepped down as CEO in 2021, Bezos still serves as executive chairman, maintaining major influence over the company he founded in a Seattle garage in 1994.
This is not his first major stock sale in 2024. In late June, Bezos sold another $736.7 million worth of shares, bringing the total amount liquidated in just the past few weeks to more than $1.4 billion.
The timing of the latest sale follows Bezos’ $50 million luxury wedding to media personality Lauren Sánchez, held in Venice, Italy, and attended by an elite circle of guests including Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ivanka Trump, and several members of the Kardashian family. Though there’s no official link between the stock sale and the wedding, the coinciding events have stirred public curiosity.
Bezos, whose net worth recently climbed back near $210 billion (according to Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index), has previously said that stock sales help fund ventures like Blue Origin, his space exploration company, and philanthropic efforts including the Bezos Earth Fund, which has pledged $10 billion to combat climate change.
While large insider stock sales often prompt questions about confidence in a company’s future, Bezos' move is part of a structured, multi-year plan—not a sudden liquidation. Pre-scheduled sales under Rule 10b5-1 trading plans are commonly used by executives to avoid accusations of insider trading and to diversify their wealth.
Amazon (AMZN), which has enjoyed a strong rebound in 2024, continues to be a dominant force in cloud computing, e-commerce, and AI infrastructure. Shares are up more than 20% year-to-date, buoyed by solid earnings and continued growth in AWS and advertising divisions.
Investors typically monitor insider sales for clues about valuation sentiment, but in Bezos’ case, the move appears procedural. Analysts have not adjusted Amazon’s price targets or growth forecasts in response to the filings.
Even after stepping back from day-to-day leadership, Bezos' financial and symbolic ties to Amazon remain deep. His gradual reduction of stock holdings is consistent with past behaviors—he sold about $8.8 billion in Amazon stock in 2020 and over $10 billion in 2021, primarily to fund personal and philanthropic ventures.
Bezos' influence, wealth, and media visibility mean that even routine transactions—like a stock sale—are closely followed by markets and media alike. As he continues to expand his footprint across industries, from space to climate tech, his moves within Amazon remain a barometer for broader shifts in tech leadership and billionaire strategy.