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August 5, 2025Ray Dalio sells his last remaining stake in Bridgewater, steps away from hedge fund’s board August 5, 2025Contentious July jobs report confirms the U.S. economy is slowing sharply. Here’s why August 4, 2025Berkshire Hathaway operating earnings dip 4% as conglomerate braces for tariff impact August 5, 2025Shares of American Eagle surge 20% after Trump calls Sydney Sweeney campaign ‘hottest ad out there’ August 5, 2025Palantir tops $1 billion in revenue for the first time, boosts guidance August 4, 2025Here’s where the jobs are in this slowing economy August 4, 2025Fed governors Bowman, Waller explain their dissents, say waiting to cut rates threatens economy
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  Finance  Walmart’s former U.S. CEO Bill Simon thinks retailer can easily absorb tariff costs, criticizes its ‘doom and gloom’ commentary
Finance

Walmart’s former U.S. CEO Bill Simon thinks retailer can easily absorb tariff costs, criticizes its ‘doom and gloom’ commentary

AdminAdmin—May 16, 20250

Walmart is best poised to weather the tariffs, says former Walmart U.S. CEO Bill Simon

Walmart‘s business is strong enough to withstand tariff headwinds without increasing its prices, according to the discount retailer’s former U.S. CEO.

Bill Simon, who ran Walmart U.S. from 2010 to 2014, suggests the company may be overstating challenges tied to tariffs.

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“If you look down deep and dig into the details of their earnings release today, you know this quarter they grew their gross profit margin in the U.S. business 25 basis points. So, they’re expanding their margin. They also reported their general merchandise categories were flattish because they had mid-single digit price deflation,” he told CNBC’s “Fast Money

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” on Thursday, the day Walmart reported fiscal first-quarter results. “That sort of gives them room in my view to manage any tariff impact that they would have.”

Simon is optimistic consumers can largely handle price increases — citing a steady jobs market and cheaper fuel prices this year. But he notes worrisome commentary from corporate executives could be chipping away at consumer confidence.

“All the doom and gloom we hear about price increases and tariffs like we heard from my friends at Walmart today, I think it scares them some,” said Simon, who’s now on the Darden Restaurants board and is the chairman at Hanesbrands.

Walmart shares fell 0.5% on Thursday, but the stock closed above session lows. Shares are off almost 9% from the all-time high of $105.30 hit on Feb. 14.

On Feb. 20, Simon joined “Fast Money” as Walmart shares were wrapping up their worst week since May 2022 on tariff jitters. He suggested the stock was a steal for investors even though Walmart warned profits were slowing.

As of Thursday’s close, Walmart shares are positive for the year, up more than 6% in 2025. The stock has climbed more than 7% since President Donald Trump’s tariff announcement on April 2.

Disclaimer

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says recession is still on the table for U.S.
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