Shares of Amazon fell sharply after drone strikes damaged three of its Middle East data centers, raising short-term concerns about cloud reliability and geopolitical exposure.
The stock dropped to an intraday low of $203.46, down more than 3% from the prior close of $210.00, before recovering to finish at $208.39, a 0.87% decline. The rebound suggests investors are weighing whether the disruption is temporary rather than structural.

In an update on the Amazon Web Services dashboard, the company confirmed that drone strikes directly hit two facilities in the United Arab Emirates, while a nearby strike in Bahrain caused structural damage.
The attacks disrupted AWS Middle East (UAE) region (ME-CENTRAL-1) and AWS Middle East (Bahrain) region (ME-SOUTH-1), affecting power delivery and forcing fire suppression efforts that caused additional water damage.
Amazon advised customers to activate disaster recovery plans and consider migrating workloads to alternative AWS regions as uncertainty persists.
From a technical perspective, the $200 level now stands out as key psychological and chart support. A sustained break below that zone could open room toward the $190–$195 range, where prior consolidation occurred.
On the upside, reclaiming $210-$215 would signal renewed bullish momentum and suggest the market views the disruption as contained. A move above $220 would likely restore the broader uptrend.
Fundamentally, analysts may reassess short-term revenue risk in the AWS segment, which accounts for a significant share of operating profit. However, unless outages become prolonged or expand regionally, long-term forecasts remain largely intact, supported by AI infrastructure demand and enterprise cloud migration trends.
In the near term, volatility may persist as geopolitical headlines drive sentiment. Longer term, investors will watch whether AWS resilience and recovery speed reinforce confidence in Amazon’s global infrastructure footprint.
If you'd like, I can also add analyst price targets, valuation metrics (P/E, forward EPS), or a more bullish/bearish version depending on tone.


