Walmart issues inflation warning as Trump preps massive tariff hikes

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Walmart whispered a quiet but significant warning Tuesday that consumer-price inflation could surge if President-elect Donald Trump follows through on his vow to impose tariffs on a host of goods imported into the world's biggest economy.

The world's largest retailer, which posted better-than-expected fiscal-third-quarter earnings and boosted its full-year profit forecast, is taking a bigger share of high-income earners' spending.

These consumers are trading down for lower prices amid the impact of post-pandemic inflation on everything from food to clothing.

Walmart's  (WMT)  U.S. same-store sales rose 5.3% in the three months ended in October, compared with the year-earlier quarter, notching its strongest quarterly tally in nearly three years.

Related: Walmart stock sees fresh record high on Q3 earnings, holiday profit outlook

Overall sales were up 6.6% to a staggering $169.6 billion, and the group sees full-year revenue rising as much as 5.1%, suggesting an overall total of around $681 billion.

Walmart, however, has been steadfast in keeping overall prices low while improving profit margins through a mix of geographies, efficiencies, and the vast scale of its domestic business.

The group boasts around 4,600 U.S. stores, with locations within 10 miles of around 90% of the U.S. population, enabling it to capture around $9 of every $100 that makes its way into a U.S. retail till.

Walmart has pledged to continue lowering prices. Tariffs could make that effort much harder. <p>Image source&colon; Walmart</p>
Walmart has pledged to continue lowering prices. Tariffs could make that effort much harder.

Image source: Walmart

That's having a significant impact on broader inflation, which is decelerating, albeit slowly and stubbornly, despite a resilient labor market and a broadly robust economy.

In the U.S., the consumer is king of the economy

The U.S. economy, aside from being the largest in the world, is unique in the sense that it relies so heavily on consumer spending to power the bulk of its growth.

That, in turn, leaves it vulnerable to inflation pressure, stoked by either wage growth, which puts more cash in potential spenders' pockets, or price increases, as consumers chase expensive goods.

The Federal Reserve, in its fight to tame those pressures, will try to slow wage growth through higher interest rates, which blunt the labor market. At the same time, the Fed hopes that second-round inflation effects will be mitigated as smaller companies cannot pass on price increases as easily as their larger rivals can.

Walmart, the largest rival in the consumer spending space, has a hammerlock on in-store retail and a growing presence in online sales. It isn't hiking prices, either. As a result, it's winning over price-conscious shoppers across a host of income brackets.