Investors weigh booming online sales against cautious profit guidance and fresh shareholder-return moves, today, Feb. 19, 2026.
Today’s Change
(-1.41%) $-1.78
Current Price
$124.84
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.0T
Day’s Range
$124.47 – $130.09
52wk Range
$79.81 – $134.69
Volume
2.6M
Avg Vol
31M
Gross Margin
23.90%
Dividend Yield
0.74%
Walmart (WMT 1.41%), a global retail and e-commerce operator, closed Thursday at $124.87, down 1.38%. The stock moved as investors weighed a solid fiscal Q4 earnings beat and robust e-commerce growth against Walmart’s cautious profit outlook and commentary on a “somewhat unstable” consumer backdrop. Investors are also balancing how guidance shapes expectations for fiscal 2026.
Trading volume reached 42.1 million shares, about 34% above its three-month average of 31.4 million shares. Walmart IPO’d in 1972 and has grown 581,123% since going public.
How the markets moved today
The S&P 500 (^GSPC 0.28%) slipped 0.29% to 6,862, while the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC 0.31%) declined 0.31% to finish at 22,683. Among discount stores, Costco Wholesale (COST 0.83%) closed at $987.82 (-0.83%) and Target (TGT +0.04%) finished at $115.66 (+0.00%), underscoring mixed sentiment across large retail peers.
What this means for investors
Walmart had significant increases in e-commerce and online pickup and delivery orders, especially among consumers with higher incomes. But investors felt its cautious outlook may signal a tough road for the stock price going forward.
In Walmart’s first earnings report since John Furner took over as CEO on Feb. 1, the company reported holiday-quarter sales rose 5% on a constant-currency basis. Operating income grew nearly 11%, as e-commerce sales grew 25% globally and 27% in the U.S.
That beat estimates and showcased how returns from tech and AI investments are paying off. With shares recently up over 20% just this year and with cautious comments especially about low-income consumers, investors took some profits today.
Howard Smith has positions in Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Costco Wholesale, Target, and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.