3 Reasons Walmart Is a Major Winner Compared to Other Retailers. Time to Buy the Stock?

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Walmart (NYSE: WMT) certainly seems to be firing on all cylinders these days. Its second-quarter results were so solid, in fact, that shares reached a record high immediately following the recently released report. Moreover, based on Walmart's strong Q2 numbers, investors are deciding the economy and consumerism are healthier than presumed less than a week ago. That bodes well for rival retailers like Target and Kroger.

Just because Walmart is winning in a challenging environment, however, doesn't actually mean its competitors are as well. This company is distinctly different from other comparable store chains. Namely, it's better-positioned to thrive regardless of the economic backdrop.

But that still doesn't make the stock a buy right now.

An encouraging quarter

For the three-month stretch ending in July, Walmart turned $169.3 billion worth of revenue into earnings of $1.67 per share. That's up from year-earlier comparisons of $161.6 billion and $0.61, respectively, and better than the top line of $168.5 billion and bottom line of $0.65 per share analysts were expecting. While grocery sales drove most of the quarter's growth, same-store sales growth (U.S., excluding fuel) rolled in at 4.2%. E-commerce revenue grew to the tune of 21%, and gross margins improved too.

In other words, it was a solid quarter -- solid enough for Walmart to raise its full-year revenue and earnings guidance, and solid enough for CFO John David Rainey to comment during the second-quarter earnings call: "We have not seen any additional strain on consumer health in our business." Analysts and investors alike readily applied that observation to other retailers' businesses.

Perhaps that's a reasonably fair presumption.

It also wouldn't be unfair to presume, however, that Walmart is doing better than its rivals by taking advantage of its sheer size and subsequent capabilities. Three details from the retailer's Q2 report subtly demonstrate this superiority.

3 clues that Walmart is doing better than its competition

First, Walmart's inventory levels continue to fall, reaching levels not seen since before the COVID-19 pandemic took hold. As of the end of last month, the company's inventory-to-sales ratio was 32.8%, down from 2022's peak of 42.7%.

On the surface, it seems problematic -- you can't sell merchandise you don't have. But that's not the big risk in retailing. The real risk is loading up on more goods than you can sell, leaving less room (and money) for more marketable merchandise. Also, the longer inventory sits on a store's shelves, the more likely it is to get stolen, damaged, or lost.