Today: 8 June 2026
Walmart Stock Just Beat a Market Rout — Now Gas Prices, AI and Amazon Could Decide What Comes Next
8 June 2026
2 mins read

Walmart Stock Just Beat a Market Rout — Now Gas Prices, AI and Amazon Could Decide What Comes Next

New York, June 7, 2026, 18:02 (EDT)

  • Walmart rose 0.97% on Friday and gained about 2.7% for the week, even as the S&P 500 slid 2.64% in a broad selloff.
  • The weekend setup puts focus on Monday’s reopening, fuel-price pressure on shoppers, and Walmart’s push into AI-backed delivery.
  • Investors also face a valuation risk: Walmart trades at about 42 times earnings, leaving less room for disappointment.

Walmart Inc. shares ended last week higher while Wall Street sold off, giving the retailer a defensive look as investors moved past a sharp technology-led break in the market. The stock closed Friday at $118.88, up 0.97% on the day and about 2.7% above the previous Friday’s close.

U.S. stock trading was closed Sunday, with Nasdaq’s regular session running Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. That makes Monday’s open the next test of whether Walmart’s gain was a one-day haven trade or a sturdier bet on groceries, value and automation.

The timing matters. Wall Street’s nine-week rally broke Friday after stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs data hit hopes for easier Federal Reserve policy, with the S&P 500 down 2.64%, the Dow off 1.35% and the Nasdaq down 4.18%. Consumer staples — companies that sell everyday goods such as food and household items — led sector gainers as technology shares sank.

Walmart’s own story is not just “cheap groceries” anymore. The company said first-quarter revenue rose 7.3%, global eCommerce sales increased 26%, and Walmart U.S. comparable sales — sales from stores and digital channels open at least a year — rose 4.1%, excluding fuel. Walmart News & Leadership

The retailer is leaning harder into automation and artificial intelligence, or software that can perform tasks that usually need human judgment. Walmart said about half of its U.S. eCommerce fulfillment center volume is automated, and it said digital growth was being helped by stores and clubs used as fulfillment points.

That strategy drew scrutiny last week. Walmart shareholders rejected a proposal asking for a report on how AI is affecting workers, Reuters reported. Josh Allen, Walmart’s head of frontline training, said the company’s AI approach stresses “responsible use and human judgment,” adding that AI learning should “build confidence, not pressure.” Reuters

At the company’s annual meeting, Walmart said about 89.88% of outstanding shares were represented and investors approved all company-backed proposals, including the election of 11 directors. Chief Executive John Furner told shareholders Walmart was “well positioned for what comes next,” a short line investors may read against the larger handoff to a more tech-heavy retail model. Walmart News & Leadership

Competition is pressing the point. Walmart added Subway meals to its express delivery service and plans to expand the offering to about 1,400 stores by late summer, part of its fight with Amazon for faster delivery. Tracy Poulliot, Walmart’s executive vice president of U.S. e-commerce and marketing, called Subway “a great starting point.” Reuters

Amazon, meanwhile, has moved Prime Day to June 23-26, keeping the sale at four days and putting more focus on groceries and fast delivery. Target remains a closer bricks-and-mortar comparison, while Costco and Walmart’s Sam’s Club are drawing shoppers to cheaper fuel as gasoline costs pinch household budgets.

Fuel is the awkward piece in the bull case. Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey told analysts that Walmart and Sam’s Club customers bought less than 10 gallons of fuel per trip for the first time since 2022; “That’s an indication of stress,” he said. AP News

Analysts are watching whether that stress turns into lost spending. Michael Gunther, senior vice president at Consumer Edge, told Reuters consumers are “clearly shifting behavior,” and said high gas prices through summer and back-to-school could pressure discretionary spending, meaning nonessential purchases such as apparel and home goods. Reuters

But the trade can still go wrong. Walmart’s share price implies a price-to-earnings ratio of about 41.7, meaning investors pay nearly $42 for each $1 of trailing earnings, and that leaves the stock exposed if fuel costs, food inflation or AI labor pushback eat into margins.

For the week ahead, the question is narrow: whether investors keep paying a premium for Walmart’s mix of value retail, automation and delivery speed after Friday’s market jolt. A steadier tape could help. Another jump in yields or oil prices would make the stock’s defensive badge harder to carry.

Stock Market Today

  • Job Market Gears Up with Rising Labor Demand and Immigrant Workforce
    June 7, 2026, 9:03 PM EDT. Demand for labor is rising sharply as the job market gains momentum. Economists suggest the uptick may be fueled by immigrants returning to the workforce, increasing overall labor supply. This shift is reshaping employment dynamics amid broader economic recovery efforts.

Latest articles

Snap Drops 5%—Ad Recovery Eyed Next

Snap Drops 5%—Ad Recovery Eyed Next

8 June 2026
Snap closed Friday at $5.76, down 5.11% amid a broad tech selloff triggered by a strong jobs report and renewed rate-hike worries, but still ended the week up 0.9%. Investors now await U.S. inflation data and CEO Evan Spiegel’s June 16 AWE keynote on Specs, as Snap faces pressure from weak North American ad revenue, tough competition, and activist demands for cost cuts.
Navitas’ Nvidia-Led Rally Stalls, Eyes on AI Trade Next Week

Navitas’ Nvidia-Led Rally Stalls, Eyes on AI Trade Next Week

8 June 2026
Navitas plunged $5.61 to $25.08 Friday as a $1.3 trillion chip selloff erased Nvidia-driven gains, despite news it issued 3.28 million shares for merger earn-outs and showcased its GaNFast power board at Nvidia’s AI MGX event; investors now face risks from share dilution, sector volatility, and Navitas’s early-stage pivot to high-power AI markets amid ongoing operating losses.
NIO Stock Drops Even as Deliveries Jump, Focus Turns to June Numbers

NIO Stock Drops Even as Deliveries Jump, Focus Turns to June Numbers

8 June 2026
NIO’s U.S.-listed shares plunged 5.8% Friday, erasing a delivery-led rally, as investors focus on whether June sales can hit the company’s Q2 target after May deliveries rose 62.3% to 37,705. NIO needs 42,939–47,939 June deliveries to meet guidance, with risks from China’s saturated car market and recent price pressure.
HPE Stock Faces AI Rally Test With Monday In Focus

HPE Stock Faces AI Rally Test With Monday In Focus

8 June 2026
Hewlett Packard Enterprise plunged 8.36% Friday to $49.20, capping a three-day slide and erasing gains after a post-earnings surge, even as it raised its fiscal 2026 revenue growth outlook to 29%-33% and boosted non-GAAP EPS guidance, with analysts warning that rapid gains may have priced in too much hope too quickly.
Snap Drops 5%—Ad Recovery Eyed Next
Previous Story

Snap Drops 5%—Ad Recovery Eyed Next

Go toTop