Walmart (WMT) could produce exceptional returns because of its solid growth attributes.
The trillion-dollar club has a new member.
Walmart Inc (NYSE:WMT, XETRA:WMT) reached a historic milestone Tuesday as its market capitalization surpassed $1 trillion for the first time, placing the retailer in a group largely dominated by technology companies. Shares rose more than 3% to $128, giving the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company a market value of $1.01 trillion.
Walmart's market capitalization topped $1 trillion on Tuesday (Feb. 3) after its shares rose as much as 1.6% in early trading and more than doubled over the past two years, the Financial Times reported Tuesday. The retailer became one of nine U.S. companies with a market over $1 trillion, according to the report.
Walmart reached a market capitalization of over $1 trillion on Tuesday morning, making it the first retailer to join an exclusive club of companies to reach a 13-figure valuation that mostly consists of tech-related companies like Nvidia, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft and Meta.
Walmart's journey to a $1 trillion market cap came after embracing technology and providing its customers with greater relief from inflation.
The retailer has joined a select group of mostly tech companies with a 13-figure valuation.
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.
Amazon sets a new delivery speed record in 2025, with over 13 billion same- or next-day deliveries worldwide. Prime members in the US received a 30% increase in fast deliveries in 2025, the company said.
Walmart's paid membership program continued to see double-digit growth in January and ended the month with 28.4 million members, a Morgan Stanley survey found, Seeking Alpha reported Monday (Feb. 2). Walmart+ membership grew about 12% year over year on a three-month rolling basis, up from about 10% in November, according to the report.
Same title. Different task.
John Furner took over as Walmart's global CEO after leading U.S. operations since 2019. He started his Walmart career as a summer intern.