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Walmart Steers Through Inflation, Boosting Profit And Sales

Shown is a Walmart location in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Nov. 17, 2021. Walmart is reporting strong fiscal fourth-quarter results that exceeded analysts' expectations as the nation's largest retailer defies higher inflation and supply chain issues. Walmart said Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022, that net income was $3.56 billion, or $1.28 per share in the quarter ended Jan. 31. That compares with a loss of $2.91 billion, or loss of 74 cents. Revenue was $151.5 billion.(AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Walmart muscled through rising inflation, a snarled global supply chain and surging costs related to COVID-19 sick leave among its workers to deliver strong fourth quarter results Thursday.

The nation’s largest retailer, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, also delivered on Thursday an upbeat outlook for this year and boosted its dividend. Shares rose more than 2% in late morning trading.

Walmart is the first major retailer to report fourth-quarter fiscal results, which include the critical holiday shopping period, and is considered a major barometer of spending given its size so analysts carefully parse through the data. Walmart executives said that its shoppers are still in good financial shape, and they don’t see any major changes in consumer behavior patterns like trading down to cheaper labels but they’re paying close attention to higher prices. It also expects supply chain issues to ease in coming months.

The report from Walmart came one day after the Commerce Department said that retail sales in the U.S. jumped a surprisingly strong 3.8% from December to January. And although inflation — which has reached the highest level in four decades in the U.S. — helped boost that figure, most of January’s gain reflected more purchases, not higher prices.

Like other retailers, Walmart faces rising costs for everything from labor to shipping as supply chain backups hit companies worldwide during the holidays. As the nation’s largest food seller, it’s also more vulnerable to rising food prices. This past holiday quarter also offered an extra challenge: a contagious new variant, omicron, that forced many workers to take sick leave, resulting in surging costs for companies having to hire more workers beyond what was planned to fill that gap. In fact, Walmart said the latest quarter’s peak in COVID leave was higher than anything it experienced in all of 2021 or 2020.

But Walmart used its clout to muscle through the big challenges by chartering vessels for its goods as it moved into the holiday shipping crunch. As for managing inflation, it said it’s using years of expertise from monitoring surging prices in other parts of the world like Mexico and parts of South America where it does business. McMillon said Walmart is closely working with suppliers to manage inflation and is keeping price gaps with its rival where it wants them. It’s particularly focused on keeping prices low for basic items that its low income segment depends on.

But Walmart, which caters to a broad array of shoppers at all income levels, has also seen opportunities in this inflationary environment.

“Walmart U.S. customer looks like the U.S. population, and it does to a really large degree,” Walmart’s CEO Doug McMillon told analysts during a call following the earnings release. “And so we’ll serve everybody. And during periods of inflation like this, middle income families, lower middle income families, even wealthier families become more price sensitive. And that’s to our advantage. ”

In fact, Walmart said that its “rollbacks” — a temporary price reduction on an item — are significantly up from the end of the third quarter and about where it was at the end of the first quarter last year.

Net income reached $3.56 billion, or $1.28 per share, in the quarter ended Jan. 31. Per share earnings adjusted for one-time costs and benefits were $1.53, or 3 cents better than Wall Street expected, according to a survey by FactSet. Total revenue rose 0.5% to $152.87 billion. Analysts expected $151.72 billion, according to FactSet

Last year during the same period, the company lost $2.9 billion due partly to costs related to the pandemic.

The company said that although COVID costs were lower than last year, it had significantly higher worker leave costs in the U.S. than anticipated. In the first three quarters combined, COVID leave costs were about $600 million but increased more than $450 million just in the fourth quarter, the company said.

Same-store sales rose 5.6% at U.S. Walmart stores, down from a 9.2% jump in the third quarter. Online growth has slowed from the pandemic-infused sprees of early 2021 and rose just 1%, down from 8% growth in the third quarter, and a nearly 70% surge in the same period a year earlier.

Walmart said that sales growth in the current fiscal year will be above 3% with earnings growth in the mid-single digit percentage range.

Walmart raised its quarterly dividend by one penny to 56 cents per share.

Shares rose $2.31 to $135.87 in late morning trading Thursday.

(AP)



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