Walmart Earnings Preview: It’s a Margin Story Now

 | Feb 19, 2024 01:27AM ET

With the stock and bond markets closed Monday, February 19, 2024, for President’s Day, when the market opens on Tuesday morning, February 20th, 2024, Walmart (NYSE:WMT) will have already reported their fiscal Q4 ’24 financial results, before the opening bell that morning.

The stock has traded up again to $170 per share, right where it was trading in mid-November ’23 when the grocery giant reported it’s Q3 ’24 results, missing on gross margin and reporting overall disappointing results, sending the stock down to $155 post-release.

Tuesday morning, Feb 20, the Street is expecting Walmart to report the following for fiscal Q4 ’24:

  • Revenue: $170.2 billion for yoy growth of 6%
  • Op inccome: $6.761 billion for yoy growth of 12%
  • EPS: $1.65 for yoy growth of 8%

Last quarter – the disappointing quarter – Walmart reported revenue growth of 5%, operating income growth that was flat yoy, and EPS growth of 2% yoy. There was a one-time litigation charge in fiscal Q3 ’24 that wasn’t explained well even in the conference, so I never did get a handle on how that charge arose. The EPS upside surprise for fiscal Q3 ’24 was just 1%, the lowest upside surprise for Walmart of the last 6 quarters. (WMT has a history of guiding cautiously and beating the estimates.)

Current fiscal ’25 estimates: ( runs from Feb 1 ’24 to Jan 31 ’25):

  • EPS growth: 9% expected yoy;
  • Rev gro: 3% expected yoy;
  • Op inc: 11% expected yoy
h2 Walmart Is an AI / Margin Story:/h2

In the last few Walmart updates written on Q2 ’24 here, and since WMT’s announcement in April of calendar ’23 that management was shifting towards productivity enhancement and lowering expenses all through the supply chain, even automating most of it where possible, that AI and AI enhancement was expected to drive margin improvement at Walmart.

It’s still early in the game, but the juggernaut that is Walmart could expand operating margins by at least 100 bp’s in my opinion, (and that may be conservative, after management went to sleep after 2010 and let Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) pick off the retail giant in numerous categories, which pushed operating margins lower. Although I’ve written this before (both on this blog and over on www.SeekingAlpha.com), here’s a history of Walmart’s operating margin (averaged over 4 quarters) by calendar year:

  • fiscal 2024 (YTD): 4.15%
  • FY ’23: 4.02%
  • FY ’22: 4.08%
  • FY ’21: 4.04%
  • FY ’20: 4.08%
  • FY ’19: 4.26%
  • FY ’18: 4.65%
  • FY ’17: 4.68%
  • FY ’16: 5.00%
  • FY ’15: 5.58%
  • FY ’14: 5.65%
  • FY ’13: 5.90%
  • FY ’12: 5.91%
  • FY ’11: 6.03%
Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

(Source: internal valuation spreadsheet)

Walmart started getting squeezed after the US economy exited the 2008 meltdown, and as Amazon ascended into general retail and apparel, but they did ok from fiscal ‘2015 to fiscal ’19, and then Covid and the pandemic really sat on the operating margin, probably due to the logistics mess that impacted many US global giants that imported goods from China and the Far East.

When you look at the above chronology, fiscal ’24 (depending on what Walmart reports Tuesday morning) could be the first year in the last 14 where the operating margin actually increased yoy.

Valuation: At $170 per share, Walmart is trading with a low 20x multiple and expecting to grow EPS 9% average from fiscal ’25 to ’27. Are sell-side analysts starting to boost EPS estimates from supply chain automation and AI savings ? It’s still hard to tell. 

WMT is trading at about 0.70x revenue (as it always has).

For readers who absorbed the Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) earnings preview this week, where the issue of KO’s earnings quality was raised, Walmart’s earnings quality is far better, when comparing net income to cash-flow and free-cash-flow: