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Amazon could jump nearly 16% this year as the coronavirus pandemic continues to boost demand, according to new biggest Wall Street bull (AMZN)

Cowen upgraded its Amazon price target on Monday to $3,700, now the highest on Wall Street.

Amazon has a new biggest bull on Wall Street that thinks the company is poised to jump another 16% this year as the coronavirus pandemic continues to support e-commerce demand.

Cowen on Monday raised its Amazon price target to $3,700 from $2,750 and reiterated its "outperform" rating on the company. The price target, which is now the highest on Wall Street, represents 16% upside from where Amazon traded at Friday's close.

Shares of Amazon rose as much as 4.5% in intraday trading Monday before paring some gains.

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The firm expects Amazon's "top line acceleration to continue," analysts led by John Blackledge wrote in the Monday note.

"We expect strong 2Q20 results with Rev. & Op. Inc. above high end of guide range," Blackledge said, adding that key drivers include AWS, advertising, subscription, and accelerating e-commerce growth.

Cowen arrived at its new price target by modestly raising its estimates for e-commerce and advertising, and rolling forward Amazon's discounted cash flow to 2021. Even though Amazon shares have gained more than 75% this year, the firm remains bullish as it sees their valuation as attractive.

As the coronavirus pandemic continues, Amazon investors will look for more robust e-commerce demand from online shopping, according to Blackledge. Recent e-commerce growth for the online giant was driven by demand in essentials, Prime 1 Day shipping, advertising, and subscription revenue growth, according to the note.

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It's expected that all of these elements "will remain robust in 2Q, in particular as the US faces staggered and sometimes halted re-openings that have continued into July as COVID-19 cases rise," said Blackledge.

He continued: "We also expect investors to look past the 2Q investments in COVID-19 related expenses that AMZN expects could reach $4BN, including headcount, elevated wages, safety equipment, testing, and pandemic relief efforts."

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