Actually, Walmart's Q1 Report Was Better Than It Seems

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Walmart’s highest-margin initiatives are growing at a very brisk pace.

  • Tariffs are also unlikely to have the sort of adverse effect that is being suggested.

  • Investors interested in taking on a long-term stake in the retailer’s stock can still safely do so, despite the response to Q1’s results and Q2’s guidance.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Walmart ›

With nothing more than a passing glance, it would be easy to come to a bearish conclusion about Walmart (NYSE: WMT). The world's biggest brick-and-mortar retailer topped its first-quarter earnings estimates, but its reported profits technically fell year over year. The company also cautioned shareholders -- and perhaps customers as well -- that new tariffs will likely force the company to raise its in-store retail prices.

Shares fell slightly following Thursday morning's release of Q1's numbers and second-quarter guidance, implying investors are at least a little bit worried about the foreseeable future.

If you're one of the worried, you might want to dig deeper into the numbers... all of them. 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.

The rest of Walmart's Q1 story

For the three months ending in April, Walmart turned $165.61 billion worth of sales into a per-share operating profit of $0.61, versus expectations of $165.84 billion and $0.58 per share, respectively. That's top-line growth of 4% year over year, and a slight improvement on the year-ago per-share operating earnings of $0.60. Same-store sales within the United States grew 4.5%, slowing somewhat from the previous quarter's pace of 4.6%. Investors balked at what could be considered lackluster results compared to most of the retailer's other recent reports.

Look closer, though. Walmart's doing better than Q1's most-touted figures imply, and it's doing particularly well where it counts the most.

Take e-commerce, for instance. Although it only makes up a modest minority of its total sales, it's arguably Walmart's top growth driver right now. Online sales improved 22% year over year last quarter, accelerating from the fourth quarter's growth rate of 16%, and slightly outpacing the growth pace of 21% for the comparable quarter a year earlier. Although the company doesn't disclose how profitable or unprofitable its e-commerce arm is, greater scale can only help its overall bottom line.

Walmart.com isn't just facilitating more sales of merchandise, however. It's also generating more and more advertising revenue, collected by brands that wish to feature their goods at the retailer's shopping website. The company reported a 31% increase in Walmart Connect's ad revenue produced within the U.S., gaining steam from Q4's growth rate of 24%.