Walmart Inc

NYSE: WMT
$91.79
+$2.29 (+2.6%)
Real Time Data Delayed 15 Min.

WMT Articles

Target is setting a new precedent among most major retailers, and thousands of Target employees are going to see a nice addition on their checks.
Apple, UnitedHealth, Walmart, and Merck led the losers among the Dow 30 stocks on Friday.
Toys "R" Us may be bankrupt, but it is not dead yet. The company said it will add 12,050 temporary holiday workers.
Walmart won't hire temporary workers for the holidays, while most large retailers need to add tens of thousands of people to handle the late-year shopping crush.
Best Buy posted a disappointing forecast, Ford said it would close plants in North America, Walmart will not hire temp workers for the holidays, and more important headlines.
Toys "R" Us was not killed by Amazon. Rather it undermined its own success with excessive debt and a slow-motion effort toward e-commerce.
Macy's hired 80,000 workers for the holidays, Toys "R" Us has filed Chapter 11, Amazon Web Services will begin to charge some customers by the second, and more important headlines.
Walmart had a strong run from the first half of the year. The stock's price has leveled off since then. Amazon's have leveled during the same period as well.
Target's management may have miscalculated the benefit of sharp cuts in product prices. The cuts may hurt Target in two ways.
Travelers and Home Depot led the DJIA gainers today while Apple and Walmart weighed the index down in a nearly flat close Friday.
Toys "R" Us may seek Chapter 11 protection. Traditionally, retailers that move into Chapter 11 shutter stores and fire workers.
Walmart's panel of experts has picked its top 25 toys for the coming holiday season. Some perennial favorites made the cut as well as some first-timers.
These five top stocks all pay good dividends and offer a degree of safety in what is clearly a very expensive market by historical standards. With fall right around the corner, playing it safe makes...
United Technologies, Apple, Boeing, and Walmart paced the DJIA to a gain on Tuesday.
Travelers, Goldman Sachs, Walmart, and IBM dragged the DJIA lower on Monday.