Idea of the Week: Lock In Defensive Income (up to 5.3%) with Walmart’s High-Velocity Cash Machine

Walmart's Aa2/AA-rated bonds offer around 5.5% yield, backed by a defensive, cash-generative business model and a stable credit profile.

iFAST Research Team
iFAST Research Team02 Jul 2026 14 Views
Idea of the Week: Lock In Defensive Income (up to 5.3%) with Walmart’s High-Velocity Cash Machine
  • Scale and High-Margin Revenue Shifts Anchor Earnings: Massive retail scale (Everyday Low Price strategy) with high-margin, recurring revenue from membership fees and advertising to stabilise cash flow against cyclical consumer spending. 
  • Proven Traffic Growth and Margin Defence: Despite upward cost pressures from international tariffs, consumer loyalty to Walmart's value proposition drove a 7.3% YoY revenue increase.
  • Conservative capital structure cushions credit risk: Backed by a top-tier AA credit rating, Walmart maintained a debt-to-asset ratio of 25.6% and an improved 36.0% net debt-to-equity profile, keeping balance sheet leverage highly manageable.
  • Robust liquidity and buffers minimise default risk: A strong 15.7x interest coverage ratio ensures comfortable debt servicing, while an undrawn US$15 billion committed credit facility provides a bulletproof backstop to reduce short-term refinancing risks.

Company Profile 

With over 10,900 physical stores and digital platforms across 19 countries, serving around 280 million customers every week, Walmart Inc. (NYSE: WMT) is an undisputed giant of global commerce. The group captures its massive volume through three core segments: Walmart US, Walmart International, and Sam's Club US. At the core of its business model is its signature Everyday Low Price (EDLP) model, focused on providing permanent affordability and convenience for its customers and members. This strategy effectively converts thin retail margins into massive transaction volumes, giving Walmart significant bargaining power over global supply chains. For credit investors, this acts as a natural defensive hedge across macroeconomic downturns. 
Rather than relying entirely on the sales volume, Walmart has also expanded its revenue mix to higher-margin commerce solutions like Walmart Connect (advertising) and omni-channel subscriptions such as Sam’s Club and Walmart+ memberships. These global membership fees generate highly visible, and recurring revenue that protects the group’s cash from shifts in discretionary consumer spending. 

Recent Financials and High-Margin Growth Engines

Just like every other business, international tariffs put upward pressure on Walmart’s costs. While Walmart tried to absorb these hikes, the company eventually implemented slight price increases on certain items to protect its margins. Along with other macroeconomic pressures, including unfavourable foreign currency exchange rates, the group saw its cost of sales increase by 4.6% year-on-year (YoY) from US$511.8 billion to US$535.4 billion in fiscal year 2026 (FY2026), ending on 31 January 2026.

Regardless of higher price tags, consumer loyalty remained remarkably sticky as households continued to patronise Walmart for affordable daily necessities. In fact, total revenue grew 4.7% YoY to US$713.2 billion, up from US$681.0 billion. Driven by continuous gains in customer transaction volumes and average spending ticket sizes, this momentum continued into the first quarter (1Q FY2027), ended 30 April 2026, where consolidated revenue climbed 7.3% YoY (or 5.9% YoY on constant currency), from US$165.6 billion to US$177.8 billion. 

As shown in Figure 1, contributing 68.1% of total revenue, Walmart US remained the dominant earnings segment, with revenue increasing from US$465.0 billion to US$485.6 billion in FY2026 (up 4.4% YoY).  Walmart International added US$132.0 billion (18.5% of total revenue), 7.0% more than FY2025’s US$123.4 billion. Sam's Club US contributed the remaining US$95.5 billion (13.4% of total revenue), up 3.2% YoY. 

While Sam's Club is the smallest segment, its membership model sets it apart from traditional retail. Upfront annual fees inject a highly predictable and high-margin stream of revenue, effectively acting as an absolute profit floor. This dynamic is mirrored across its digital ecosystem through Walmart+ subscriptions and Walmart Connect. In Q1 FY2027, global membership fee revenue surged 17.4% YoY, while AI-driven customer engagement enhancements prompted marketplace sellers to scale ad spend. Consequently, the global advertising business jumped 37% YoY, anchored by a 36% YoY increase in the Walmart US segment alone. 

For bond investors, this strengthens the predictability of cash flows and supports debt servicing capacity over time.

Figure 1: Revenue by Segments 

Source: Walmart’s Financial Statements

Operating Leverage & Cash Generation Profile 

In Q1 FY2027, operating income grew 5% YoY, from US$7.1 billion to US$7.5 billion. Elevated fuel costs across Walmart's distribution and fulfilment network created short-term cost headwinds that slightly pinched margins. Walmart’s expanding mix of high-margin advertising, membership, and marketplace income effectively absorbed rising fuel cost pressures, allowing operating income to grow in tandem with top-line sales. Looking at the group’s operating income and operating margin over the past five fiscal years (see Figure 2), Walmart’s EDLP strategy has effectively defended profit margins, even amid rising trade costs. Aside from the FY2023 dip due to a one-off litigation-related charge, this margin resilience has been consistently held around 4.2%. This resilience reflects genuine operating leverage rather than simple top-line momentum, underpinning its steady underlying cash generation. 

Full-year FY2026 free cash flow (FCF) rose 17.9% YoY to US$14.9 billion, from US$12.7 billion in FY2025. However, in Q1 FY2027, FCF fell to negative US$1.9 billion - a sharp swing both sequentially from Q4 FY2026, and year-over-year compared to the positive US$425 million reported in Q1 FY2026. This was mainly caused by a US$700 million drop in operating cash from inventory timing, plus a surge of US$1.7 billion in capital spending for omnichannel growth. Rather than an operational decline, this is more of a strategic investment. The first quarter is typically Walmart's weakest for free cash flow (see Figure 3 below), due to the inventory build that precedes the spring and summer selling season. 

Walmart has been allocating a meaningful portion of its capital spending towards AI and automation - most visibly Sparky, Walmart's in-app AI shopping assistant. Customers using Sparky spend approximately 35% more than non-users, with weekly active users more than doubling in the most recent quarter alone. Sparky has also been directly embedded into ChatGPT and Google Gemini, letting customers build carts on these platforms while keeping the actual transaction inside Walmart's own systems. Beyond Sparky, automation now covers roughly 50% of Walmart US e-commerce fulfilment volume, with further rollout planned across more facilities this year. According to the management, e-commerce transactions are already showing double-digit incremental margins. Additionally, within Walmart's planning horizon, a fully loaded e-commerce transaction is expected to become more profitable than an in-store one - a structural margin tailwind layered on top of the near-term revenue lift from Sparky-driven engagement. 

On forward capex guidance, Walmart has not issued a specific dollar capex target for FY2027 like previous years. Instead, Walmart's investment plans are reflected in its broader FY2027 guidance of 3.5% to 4.5% net sales growth, with the implicit assumption that capital intensity remains broadly consistent with recent years. Operating income is expected to continue improving as fuel cost headwinds ease and e-commerce scale and global advertising momentum build. Management has also guided for adjusted operating income to grow 7.0% to 10.0% in constant currency in Q2 FY2027. 

Figure 2: Walmart Inc. Five-Year Operating Income and Operating Margin Trend (FY2022–FY2026) 

Source: Walmart’s Financial Statements  

 Figure 3: Walmart’s Quarterly Free Cash Flow (Q1FY2025 - Q1FY2027) 

Source: Walmart’s Financial Statements

Balance Sheet Strength & Liquidity 

As of 30 April 2026, the group held US$10.7 billion in cash and cash equivalents against total debt (including finance and operating lease obligations) of US$74.2 billion. Total debt to total asset ratio maintained at 25.61%, as shown in Table 1, the group's leverage profile has remained broadly stable year-over-year. The US$7.1 billion increase in total debt over the period was driven mainly by a US$5.1 billion rise in short-term borrowings, reflecting the seasonal financing of Walmart's Q1 inventory build ahead of the spring and summer selling season, alongside a more modest US$1.8 billion increase in lease obligations. Walmart's net debt stood at US$63.5 billion against total equity of US$100.7 billion, putting net debt to total equity at 63.0%, slightly lower from 64.1% in Q1 FY2026. 

This is an encouraging sign for bond investors, as it shows that the group’s financial structure is strengthening and can provide greater financial flexibility and reduce reliance on external financing. 

Table 1: Balance Sheet Strength 

Q1 FY2027

Q1 FY2026

Total Debt [1]
(USD millions)

74,179

67,205

Total Asset [2]

(USD millions)

289,607

262,372

Total Debt / Total Asset [1/2]
(%)

25.61

25.61

Cash [3]
(USD millions)

10,729

9,311

Net Debt [4, 1-3=4]

(USD millions)

63,450

57,784

Total Equity [5]

(USD millions)

100,682

90,341

Net Debt / Total Equity [4/5]
(%)

63.02

64.08

Source: Bondsupermart
Data as of 30 June 2026
Debt figures are lease-adjusted

On a trailing-twelve-month (TTM) basis, Walmart's leased-adjusted total debt to EBITDA stood at approximately 1.65x (see Table 2 below), up from 1.52x in FY2026. This increase reflects a seasonal step-up in short-term borrowings ahead of Walmart's spring and summer season, and not any underlying deterioration in credit quality. Interest coverage ratio (ICR), stood at approximately 15.67x over the same period.

While Walmart's lease-adjusted leverage has increased slightly on a sequential basis, its earnings base remains large enough, relative to both its debt load and its interest obligations, that near-term debt servicing risk remains low.

Table 2: Leverage & Debt Servicing Capacity 

TTM

FY2026

FY2025

FY2024

Total Debt [1]
(USD millions)

74,179

67,095

60,114

61,321

EBITDA [2]
(USD millions)

44,838

44,028

42,321

38,865

Total Debt / EBITDA [3, 1/2=3 ]

(x)

1.65

1.52

1.42

1.57

Interest Expense [4]

(USD millions)

2,861

2,799

2,728

2,683

Interest Coverage Ratio [5, 2/4=5] 

(x)

15.67

15.72

15.51

14.49

Source: Bondsupermart
Data as of 30 June 2026

Overall, we think that Walmart has a solid investment-grade credit profile, especially with its top-tier AA credit rating. With its earnings anchored by a highly defensive core driven by the EDLP strategy and accelerated by advertising and memberships, Walmart possesses a highly resilient cash-generation capacity. Looking ahead, we expect Walmart's credit profile to remain stable, with potential for further structural improvement as these high-margin business segments continue to expand and mature.

Bond Recommendation 

The WMT 4.500% 15Apr2053 Corp (USD), offers a yield-to-worst of 5.456% at an ask price of US$88.62. Against comparable public retail peers, Walmart's strong pricing reflects its superior credit standing. With its Aa2/AA rated issuer, the WMT 4.500% 15Apr2053 Corp (USD) issue naturally prices at a lower yield relative to the rest. While investors can find higher yield pickups in consumer discretionary peers (in Table 3), these higher yields come with a trade-off in the form of greater cyclicality and weaker credit profiles.

Across the comparison set in Table 3, Walmart consistently prices tighter than Target and Kroger at nearly every tenor - reflecting its superior credit standing as the only Aa2/AA-rated issuer in the basket. At the long end, the WMT 4.500% 15Apr2053 yields 5.456%, versus 5.621% for Target's comparable 2053 issue (+17bp), 5.764% for Amazon's 2052 bond (+31bp), and 5.975% for Kroger's 2054 bond (+52bp). This pattern is equally evident at shorter tenors: at the 5-year point, Target offers 30bp over Walmart, Amazon 29bp, and Kroger 42bp; at the 9-year point, Target offers 21bp, Amazon 24bp, and Kroger 44bp - despite both carrying ratings at least a full notch below Walmart.

Amazon's curve is worth a brief note given its near-AA rating profile (A1/AA/AA−). Despite sharing Walmart's AA rating at S&P and sitting only one Moody's notch below, Amazon still trades 11–31bp wider than Walmart across all four tenors - consistent with credit logic and confirming that Walmart's Aa2 composite rating commands a genuine pricing premium even against the strongest tech-retail credit in the comparison set. Notably, at the 2-year tenor, Amazon (+11bp) offers a narrower yield pickup over Walmart than Target (+14bp) does, despite Target carrying a lower rating at both Moody's (A2) and S&P (A). Taken together, the peer comparison suggests that Walmart's bonds are fully priced relative to the comparison set — the market is already paying up for the credit quality, leaving limited spread compression potential from current levels.

Table 3: Peer Comparison

Issuer

Issue

Ask Price
(USD)

Yield to Worst

(%)

Years to Maturity

Credit Ratings
(Moody’s / S&P / Fitch)

Walmart Inc.

WMT 3.700% 26Jun2028 Corp (USD)

99.051

4.203

1.990 

Aa2 / AA / AA

Walmart Inc.

WMT 1.800% 22Sep2031 Corp (USD)

88.248

4.339

5.231 

Aa2 / AA / AA

Walmart Inc.

WMT 4.900% 28Apr2035 Corp (USD)

100.754

4.792

8.831 

Aa2 / AA / AA

Walmart Inc.

WMT 4.500% 15Apr2053 Corp (USD)

88.619

5.456

26.809 

Aa2 / AA / AA

Target Corp

TGT 4.350% 15Jun2028 Corp (USD)

100.019

4.339

1.960

A2 / A / -

Target Corp

TGT 7.000% 15Jul2031 Corp (USD)

110.516

4.634

5.041

A2 / A / -

Target Corp

TGT 5.000% 15Apr2035 Corp (USD)

100.002

4.999

8.791

A2 / A / -

Target Corp

TGT 4.800% 15Jan2053 Corp (USD)

88.752

5.621

26.546

A2 / A / -

Amazon.com Inc

AMZN 1.650% 12May2028 Corp (USD)

95.289

4.310

1.867

A1 / AA / AA-

Amazon.com Inc

AMZN 2.100% 12May2031 Corp (USD)

89.087

4.632

4.950

A1 / AA / AA

Amazon.com Inc

AMZN 4.650% 20Nov2035 Corp (USD)

97.143

5.035

8.711

A1 / AA / AA

Amazon.com Inc

AMZN 3.950% 13Apr2052 Corp (USD)

77.796

5.764

25.794

A1 / AA / AA-

Kroger Co

KR 3.700% 01Aug2027 Corp (USD)

99.279

4.388

1.087

Baa1 / BBB / -

Kroger Co

KR 1.700% 15Jan2031 Corp (USD)

87.661

4.756

4.958

Baa1 / BBB / -

Kroger Co

KR 5.000% 15Sep2034 Corp (USD)

98.472

5.230

8.212

Baa1 / BBB / -

Kroger Co

KR 5.5% 15Sep2054 Corp (USD)

93.547

5.975

28.210

Baa1 / BBB / -

Source: Bondsupermart
Data as of 1 July 2026

Figure 4: Corporate Yield Curve Comparison 

Source: Bloomberg
Data as of 30 June 2026

At the 25-year tenor, the WMT 4.500% 15Apr2053 offers a yield of 5.456%, trading approximately 40 basis points over the US Treasury curve. We view this as fairly priced - the tight Treasury spread reflects the quality premium already baked into Walmart's Aa2/AA rating, and does not offer a particularly wide cushion above the risk-free rate for the duration commitment involved. With a modified duration of approximately 15 years, the bond suits investors seeking high-quality long-duration income on a buy-and-hold basis, rather than those looking for spread compression upside.

For investors seeking the same Aa2/AA credit quality with less rate sensitivity, the WMT 3.700% 26Jun2028 (1.99 years, YTW 4.203%) and WMT 1.800% 22Sep2031 (5.23 years, YTW 4.339%) offer a more balanced entry point. We also view these as fairly priced, given the limited spread over Treasuries. 

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