The simple answer is no.
4K - or UHD to be more accurate - comes in a scale of bandwidths. Basic 2160p at 24/25/30Hz (frame rate, or fps) without HDR and WCG is the lowest, and so puts the least demand on the cable. This is what you'd get if you had a Sky Q box with the resolution set to UHD 4K. Depending on frame rate, the cable is passing up to 9 Gbps. For short runs of a couple or 3 metres, you'll get away with a good 1080p cable. As the cable length increases then the spec has to go up.
The next step up in the scale is adding Wide Colour Gamut and High Dynamic Range to the 2160p 24/25/30Hz spec. This is what you'd get from a UHD Blu-ray player that is DolbyVision rated. Here, the cable is transporting up to 13.2 Gbps.
At the top of the tree is 2160p at up to 60Hz with either 8bit RGB or 12bit Component. This is what you'd get running a graphics card at 3840x2160 rest at 60fps. RGB uses the full 8bit bandwidth on each of the three colour-channels. Component uses colour compression. The bandwidth for both is 18.2 Gbps. This means that in 2160p 60Hz Component mode, the signal supports WCG and HDR. In RGB mode at 50/60Hz you can't have WCG and HDR.
Why's all this important?
It's for when you read the reviews.
Most people have no clue about the differences between the refresh rates and colour depths (8-bit/10-bit/12-bit). They just focus on the resolution. Someone connecting up a SkyQ box at UHD res may well find that their cheap 15m UHD/4K cable works just fine, so they'll post a positive review without realising that it only works because the signal is low bandwidth in 4K/UHD terms Someone else with a UHD BD player says the same cable doesn't work. That's because they've got discs with HDR and WCG. They return one then spend more on a higher spec cable and find it work. The cycle repeats. They post a review, and then someone with gaming PC buys the same cable only to find that it works fine for streaming and UHD BDs, but not for gaming because that needs the full-fat 18Gbps to work.
Sending UHD 4K @ 60Hz over distance is really difficult. Go to AVForums and search to see what people are buying now in longer HDMI cables. The Amazon basics isn't going to do it unless you've got very basic needs.