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Walmart ended its fiscal year with strong sales numbers but joined a chorus of large direct-to-consumer businesses in warning that Americans are pulling back on discretionary spending.
The company reported a 4% year-over-year jump in comparable store sales, a number buoyed by an increase in transactions that helped beat analyst expectations. Still, Walmart cautioned that its customers were pulling back on big-ticket purchases including TVs, computers, and other electronics.
“We continue to see a customer that’s resilient but looking for value,” Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said on the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call Tuesday.
McMillon said the company was working to give consumers more bang for their buck through price decreases in its U.S. stores. He added that Walmart’s general merchandise prices are already lower than they were a year ago, and in some categories, prices are at a lower level than they were two years ago. The company reported that its average ticket price in the U.S. dropped 0.3% compared to the same period last year.
Walmart’s stock surged as much as 5% in early Tuesday trading following its earnings results.
Still, the retailer’s strong fourth-quarter results were supported by gains in its grocery as well as its health & wellness business in the U.S., which offset weaker sales in the general merchandise category.
Less guilty pleasure shopping
Walmart’s earnings report echoed other businesses that have recently alerted investors about consumers’ spending habits: namely, that they’re continuing to spend on necessities but slowing down on non-essential purchases.
Earlier this month, Adidas reported lower-than-expected sales guidance for 2024—and its CEO said consumer sentiment was weakening worldwide. Adidas’ results came after Nike and Puma also cut expectations for the year ahead.
The fall in spending on non-essentials could signal that a broader decrease in consumer spending is on the horizon as consumers tighten their belts after splurging last year. Because consumer spending makes up a large part of the U.S. economy, a major pullback could be a drag on the overall market.
A report by management consulting firm McKinsey & Company last week revealed that changing consumer habits could explain the decrease in spending on nonessentials. While consumers are shopping as frequently as they were a year ago, they are buying fewer items on average than before, according to the report.
McKinsey also found the main driver for a pullback in purchases across several categories had to do with higher prices, according to a December survey of 1,000 respondents.
The Commerce Department said in a report last week that retail sales fell by 0.8% last month after rising a revised 0.4% in December.
Still, while companies sound the alarm on consumer spending, some analysts think it will remain strong this year after 2023 exceeded expectations.
Earlier this month Fitch Ratings revised its annual real consumer spending forecast for 2024 up to 1.6% from 0.6% based on consumer’s willingness to draw from the money they’ve saved up.
“The strength of the U.S. economy reflects renewed fiscal easing, consumers’ willingness to continue drawing on excess savings, strong household balance sheet fundamentals and a tight labor market,” Olu Sonola, the head of Fitch U.S. economic research, said in a statement.
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