Walmart responds to Trump's directive to 'eat tariffs'
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President Donald Trump's tariffs are widening the gap between market-leader Walmart and Target, the companies' latest quarterly reports show, underscoring missteps at the smaller U.S. retailer amid economic uncertainty.
Many investors celebrated the agreement between the U.S. and China to relax trade tensions at least temporarily. Walmart's executives expressed some relief as well in the company's Q1 earnings call. CEO C. Douglas McMillon thanked President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent for lowering tariffs on Chinese imports.
Bessent told CNN's "State of the Union" May 18 that he spoke with Walmart CEO Doug McMillon the day before, when Trump told the company on Truth Social that they should "' EAT THE TARIFFS ," and not charge valued customers "ANYTHING."
Walmart is planning on eliminating nearly 1,500 jobs as part of an effort to restructure its global tech, United States e-commerce and advertising arms."To accelerate our progress delivering the experiences that will define the future of retail,
Federal Reserve officials said on Tuesday that higher prices are coming on the back of rising U.S. import tariffs, with the open question now whether the inflation shock will be fleeting or more persistent.
On Tuesday, it was reported that Chinese shipments of Apple's iPhone and mobile devices to the US fell to their lowest since 2011 in April. The sharp drop highlights how US tariff
David Bellinger, Mizuho senior analyst, joins CNBC's 'Money Movers' to discuss the potential impact of tariffs on Walmart.
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Walmart’s latest earnings report reveals early signs of pressure from rising tariffs even as it celebrates its first profitable quarter in e-commerce. With CFO John David Rainey warning of price hikes and CEO Doug McMillon outlining trade-related challenges,