Just finished digging through Walmart's Q3 earnings and, this is exactly the kind of setup I've been waiting for. The retail giant just crushed expectations and I'm seeing a technical breakout forming that's too good to ignore.

Walmart delivered $0.62 EPS versus the Street's $0.60 - not a massive beat, but here's what's interesting: revenue hit $179.5B, smashing the $177.6B consensus with 6% year-over-year growth. Same-store sales in the US jumped 4.5% against 4% expectations. But the real story? Online sales exploded 27% globally.

I'm looking at a company that raised full-year guidance to $2.58-$2.63 EPS (up from $2.52-$2.62) and revenue growth to 4.8%-5.1%. When a mega-cap raises guidance in this environment, you pay attention.
The stock initially popped 6% to $106+ on the earnings beat - classic momentum move that shows institutional interest. We're now sitting around $105.80, and here's what I'm watching:
If we break above $107 with volume, I'm expecting a measured move to $112-115.
This is where it gets really interesting. Target's been stagnant for four years while Walmart's eating their lunch. Dollar General? Getting destroyed as low-income shoppers migrate to Walmart. The secret weapon? Walmart's massive grocery business (60% of US sales) creates that sticky customer relationship.
What really has me excited: high-income households are flooding in. CEO Doug McMillon specifically called out strength "across income cohorts and especially with higher income households." When wealthy consumers start shopping at Walmart for value, that's not a temporary trend - it's a secular shift.
Three things could send this stock parabolic:

We're heading into the holiday season with Walmart already raising guidance. Consumer spending patterns show a K-shaped recovery - high earners spending strong, low-income struggling. Walmart uniquely positioned to capture both segments.
Fed Chair Powell acknowledged this bifurcated economy in October. While McDonald's reported double-digit traffic declines from low-income consumers, Walmart's seeing growth across all income levels. That's resilience.
I'm bullish with a 6-month target of $115.
Here's how I'm playing it:
Entry zones:
Position sizing:
Risk management:
Options play:
Walmart's proving it's not just a recession play - it's THE play for this weird economic environment. Growing market share, crushing online sales, attracting wealthy shoppers, raising guidance - this is what momentum looks like in retail.
The risk/reward here is compelling. Downside seems limited with that dividend yield and defensive characteristics. Upside could surprise if they execute on the tech transformation and maintain these growth rates.
I'm not waiting for a perfect entry. Sometimes you just need to recognize when a company's hitting an inflection point. Walmart's there right now.
Position: Long WMT shares, adding on dips, targeting $115 by May 2026


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