• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Quixnet Email
  • User Agreement

Welcome to Quixnet

  • Breaking News
  • World
  • US
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology

Walmart signals it may raise prices in response to soaring fuel costs – NBC News

May 21, 2026 by quixnet

news Alerts
There are no new alerts at this time
Walmart signaled Thursday that it may raise retail prices in the coming months to compensate for soaring fuel costs as a result of the Iran war.
Subscribe to read this story ad-free
Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content.
The big-box retailer reported overall positive first-quarter earnings. Revenue rose 7.3% to $177.8 billion, and U.S. same-store sales grew 4.1%, thanks in part to e-commerce and revenue from membership fees.
But spiking fuel prices took a big bite out of Walmart’s profits. It said it absorbed $175 million in higher-than-planned fuel costs over the quarter.
“These are real impacts to cost of goods sold for us and our suppliers,” Walmart’s chief financial officer, John David Rainey, said on a call with Wall Street analysts Thursday. “If the current elevated cost environment persists, we’d expect somewhat higher retail price inflation in Q2 and the second half of the year.”
Walmart also issued guidance to investors for the second quarter that fell short of expectations, according to a survey of analysts by the London Stock Exchange Group.
Walmart shares plunged more than 7% Thursday. The company lost more than $75 billion in market value because of the sell-off and fell out of the $1 trillion club.
Quarterly earnings for Walmart, the country’s largest private employer and one of its biggest retailers, offer a window into how the U.S. economy and consumers are doing. Its latest report points to a consumer under pressure — especially as soaring fuel costs ripple through the economy.
Regular gas averaged $4.56 per gallon nationwide Thursday, far higher than the $2.98 average right before the war, according to AAA. Diesel averaged $5.66 per gallon, up around $2 since the war started.
Those prices are putting extra pressure on already-strained American consumers.
“The high-income customer is spending with confidence into many categories, while the lower-income consumer is more budget-conscious and perhaps navigating financial distress,” Rainey said.
Some consumers, he said, are changing their gasoline habits.
“The number of gallons that customers fill up with when they come to our fuel stations fell below 10 for the first time since 2022,” Rainey said. “That’s an indication of stress.”
In April, consumer prices jumped 3.8%, outpacing wage growth for the first time since 2023. Economists said much of the rise was due to soaring fuel costs.
The hit to Americans’ wallets could worsen: Economists warn we have yet to feel the full economic effects of the war.
Higher-than-usual tax refunds might have also alleviated some of the strain. But now that the cushion is over, “consumers are going to feel more of that pressure from higher fuel prices,” Rainey said in an interview Thursday with CNBC.
Not all consumers will feel it equally, however. Walmart’s earnings were only the latest example of what experts call the K-shaped economy. Higher-income households, many benefiting from stock market gains and higher wage growth, are driving an outsized share of consumer spending. Meanwhile, many on the lower end of the “K” are finding their paychecks can’t keep up with rising costs of food, housing, utilities and childcare.
Target reported Wednesday that its first-quarter net sales rose more than 6% over last year. Target’s shares fell in trading Wednesday.
Led by a new CEO, Target is looking to turn around years of declining sales, with some consumers expressing frustration over what they said were disorganized stores and rollbacks of the company’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
But in the retail wars, the new king is Amazon, which recently overtook Walmart as the world’s largest company by revenue.
Walmart, meanwhile, has been positioning itself as a tech-forward competitor to Amazon — including through investments in artificial intelligence. Walmart has also expanded its delivery offerings, and Rainey said it can now deliver products to 60% of U.S. households within 30 minutes.
It may be facing a new challenge in the grocery aisle from supermarket chain Kroger. Bloomberg reported Thursday that Kroger is considering major price cuts to lure back customers who may have decamped to discount retailers for groceries.
But for now, some financial analysts are relatively optimistic about Walmart.
“Walmart is taking real traffic share rather than simply riding price inflation,” Bryan Hayes, stock strategist at Zacks Investment Research, said Thursday.
“In a quarter when U.S. consumer sentiment hit a fresh record low and gasoline prices spiked on Middle East tensions, the fact that more shoppers are walking into Walmart stores and clicking on Walmart.com is arguably the single most important data point in the entire retail tape this earnings season.”
Kayla Steinberg is a producer at NBC News covering business and the economy.
© 2026 NBCUniversal Media, LLC

source

Filed Under: US

Primary Sidebar

Quote of the Day

Footer

Read More

  • Breaking News
  • World
  • US
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology

My Account & Help

  • Quixnet Email
  • User Agreement

Copyright © 2026 · Urban Communications Inc. · Log in