NEW YORK, Jan 4, 2026, 11:51 ET — Market closed
- Walmart shares closed up $1.34, or 1.2%, on Friday at $112.76.
- Investors head into Monday focused on U.S. jobs data due Jan. 9 and CPI inflation figures due Jan. 13.
- Walmart’s next scheduled investor events include the Jan. 13 ICR Conference and its Feb. 19 earnings release.
Walmart Inc. shares ended Friday up $1.34, or 1.2%, at $112.76, heading into the first full trading week of 2026 with a modest gain on the board.
For investors, the retailer is a quick read on the U.S. consumer because it sits at the center of grocery spending and everyday purchases, where small shifts in demand can show up fast.
That matters this week because markets are bracing for a dense run of economic reports after a 43-day U.S. government shutdown disrupted the release schedule. U.S. employment data is due on Jan. 9 and the consumer price index — a key inflation gauge — is due Jan. 13; “The market is looking for direction,” said Matthew Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak. Reuters
Friday’s session underscored that tug-of-war: the Dow ended up 0.66% and the S&P 500 gained 0.19%, while the Nasdaq slipped 0.03% as chipmakers jumped and some consumer discretionary names such as Amazon weighed on the tech-heavy index. Reuters
Walmart’s next company-specific catalysts are on the calendar. It is due to appear at the ICR Conference on Jan. 13 and to report fiscal 2026 fourth-quarter results on Feb. 19, the company’s events schedule shows. Walmart News & Leadership
On the chart, Walmart is trading near the upper end of its 52-week range of $79.81 to $117.45. It is also above its 50-day moving average of $108.41 and its 200-day moving average of $100.18 — trend lines based on past closing prices that traders watch for support and momentum. Zacks
Conference remarks can move the stock even without fresh earnings, as investors listen for early color on holiday demand, gross-margin trends and how pricing is holding up across food and general merchandise.
But the near-term risk is macro-driven. A weak jobs report could revive recession fears that spill into consumer names, while hotter inflation would likely push traders to price in fewer Federal Reserve rate cuts.
Walmart can benefit when investors lean defensive, yet it can also lag if markets swing back toward higher-growth stocks. That push-and-pull is sharpening as 2026 begins without a clear consensus on the rate path.
Markets reopen on Monday, with the next checkpoints for Walmart watchers set for Jan. 9’s employment report and Jan. 13’s CPI release, followed by Walmart’s Jan. 13 ICR appearance and its Feb. 19 earnings report.