Walmart, tariffs
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This company's doing far better than the market's initial response suggests. In fact, this stock's still a solid buy -- not despite economic challenges, but arguably because of them. For the three months ending in April,
This would indicate an 8% year-over-year reduction in earnings and a 2% rise in sales as compared to the previous year's figures of 63 cents per share and $161.51
Joe Feldman, Telsey Advisory Group, joins 'Fast Money' to talk what to expect from Walmart's quarterly results.
Many investors celebrated the agreement between the U.S. and China to relax trade tensions at least temporarily. Walmart's executives expressed some relief as well in the company's Q1 earnings call. CEO C. Douglas McMillon thanked President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent for lowering tariffs on Chinese imports.
Walmart reported Q1 sales growth of 2.5%, below estimated $165.88B. EPS of 61 cents beat estimated 58 cents. Global eCommerce sales grew 22%. In Q2, sales expected to grow 3.5-4.5% and for FY26, adjusted EPS outlook is $2.
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Retail Insight Network on MSNWalmart’s revenue climbs in Q1 FY26 but net income dipsUS retail giant Walmart has disclosed total revenue of $165.61bn in the first quarter (Q1) of fiscal 2026 (FY26) - a 2.5% increase from the previous year's $161.51bn during the same period. The company also saw a 2.
Walmart China's first-quarter results showcased a robust performance, with net sales reaching $6.7 billion, a year-on-year increase of 22.5 percent. The company reported 16.8 percent growth in comparable sales, driven in part by a 34 percent surge in its e-commerce segment.
You might want to prepare for things to pay more at Walmart. The company’s CFO, John David Rainey, told CNBC that the Trump administration’s tariffs are “still too high” and that consumers could see higher prices “likely towards the tail end of this month, and then certainly much more in June.”