Zacks.com users have recently been watching Walmart (WMT) quite a bit. Thus, it is worth knowing the facts that could determine the stock's prospects.
To say that Synchrony Financial double-clicked on new partnerships and BNPL in its earnings call Tuesday (July 22) is an understatement. Because in fact, it triple-clicked.
In the race to dominate modern retail's final frontier of instant convenience, Walmart has done what once seemed improbable: outpace Amazon in the battle for same-day delivery.
Walmart executives predict that traditional search boxes will become obsolete as the retailer rolls out Sparky, an AI shopping agent designed to handle everything from routine grocery orders to complex purchase research. The prediction came as part of Walmart's July 24 announcement of "the next chapter of AI at Walmart"—a comprehensive four-part agentic AI framework that includes Sparky for customers, Marty for suppliers and advertisers, an Associate Agent for employees, and a Developer Agent for building systems.
Walmart unveiled plans on Thursday to roll out a suite of AI-powered "super agents" designed to improve the shopping experience for customers and streamline operations.
Walmart built so many AI agents, things started to get confusing. Now the retail giant is looking to simplify.
Daniel Danker will become Walmart's head of global AI acceleration, product and design, reporting to the CEO.
Walmart says it is making efforts to rid its online marketplace of counterfeit sellers. “While counterfeits are estimated to represent a tiny minority of the products sold on marketplaces, it is an issue that plagues all retail marketplaces,” the retail giant wrote in a Tuesday (July 22) blog post.
For years, stock splits have been one of the most exciting trends on Wall Street.
Walmart is reengineering its global supply chain with a focus on automation and real-time artificial intelligence (AI). “Proven U.S. technologies are now rolling out globally, enabling faster, smarter operations at scale,” the retail giant said in a news release Thursday (July 17).
Prices on items like baby gear and home goods climbed at Walmart in recent weeks, while the cost of dozens of other products CNBC tracked remained the same. The trends are an indicator of where prices are changing, and aren't, as President Donald Trump's tariffs take hold.
Walmart Inc. WMT and Dollar General Corporation DG are two of the biggest names in the U.S. retail sector, a cornerstone industry that plays a crucial role in consumer spending and the broader economy. Both companies operate thousands of stores nationwide, serving millions of shoppers daily, with a focus on affordability and convenience.