Does Walmart Have a Durable Competitive Advantage?

Source Motley_fool

Key Points

  • Walmart’s scale and grocery dominance remain structurally durable.

  • Advertising, marketplace, and membership initiatives represent the most straightforward path to margin expansion.

  • Execution in higher-margin segments will determine whether the moat widens.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Walmart ›

Walmart (NASDAQ: WMT) generated approximately $713 billion in revenue in fiscal 2026, serving around 270 million customers weekly. That scale is extraordinary.

But scale alone is not a moat. Size without a structural advantage becomes operational complexity.

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The real question for long-term investors is this: Is Walmart's competitive advantage durable -- and, more importantly, is it improving?

Because stability preserves capital, improvement compounds it.

Customer shopping for goods in supermarket.

Image source: Getty Images.

The foundation: Scale that still matters

Walmart's original advantage remains rooted in cost leadership.

With over $483 billion in U.S. net sales, the company commands purchasing leverage that few global retailers can match. Suppliers depend on its volume, and that leverage reinforces Walmart's low price positioning.

Infrastructure is just as critical. Walmart's vast store base doubles as fulfillment centers, creating logistics density that would take competitors decades and billions of dollars to replicate.

This shows up operationally. Despite thin retail margins, Walmart generated $31.1 billion in operating income in fiscal year 2026. The margin percentage is modest, but the absolute profit pool is enormous because of scale.

In groceries -- a category that drives habitual traffic -- Walmart's dominance reinforces the ecosystem. Traffic sustains volume. Volume sustains cost leadership. Cost leadership sustains price perception.

That flywheel has been spinning for decades and continues to spin today.

The fundamental shift: Improving earnings quality

The core moat is stable. But stability is not the same as expansion.

Retail, by nature, is low-margin. Management understands this. Over the past several years, Walmart has focused more on the earnings mix.

Three areas matter most:

E-commerce and marketplace

Global e-commerce revenue continues to grow rapidly, reaching 24% in the quarter ended Jan. 31, 2026. Marketplace sales are likely to expand even faster, and that's crucial because marketplace revenue generates fee income without inventory risk.

Advertising

Walmart's advertising business now generates more than $6 billion annually and has been growing at high double-digit rates. While still small relative to total revenue, advertising carries significantly higher margins than traditional retail.

Membership revenue

Walmart+ and Sam's Club memberships introduce recurring income and deepen customer engagement.

Individually, these segments do not redefine Walmart overnight. Collectively, however, they influence the trajectory of margins.

Consider this. If Walmart can sustain low-single-digit revenue growth (management guides roughly 3.5% to 4.5% for fiscal 2027) while gradually expanding operating margins, that signals moat expansion through mix shift.

On the contrary, if margins stagnate despite advertising and marketplace growth, the moat remains defensive and does not improve.

That distinction matters, so investors should keep an eye on that.

Where the moat is strongest

Walmart's competitive position remains particularly durable in:

  • Grocery leadership, which anchors traffic across economic cycles.
  • Supply chain density, allowing rapid pickup and delivery coverage across much of the U.S.
  • Purchasing leverage, reinforced by unmatched scale.

These advantages are difficult to disrupt because they require infrastructure, capital, and time to build.

Importantly, they are not trend-dependent. Even in downturns, consumers will gravitate toward value.

Where the moat faces pressure

Still, no competitive advantage is permanent.

Competition from Amazon remains significant, particularly in higher-margin digital segments. Amazon's Prime ecosystem integrates e-commerce, entertainment, and cloud infrastructure in ways that Walmart does not fully replicate.

Margin pressure also remains structural. Labor costs, tariffs, and price competition cap pricing power. Even modest cost inflation can offset operational gains, affecting the operating margins.

Moreover, execution risk warrants attention. Transforming a $700 billion+ enterprise into a higher-margin ecosystem requires disciplined capital allocation. Particularly, advertising and marketplace initiatives must scale meaningfully to influence consolidated operating margins.

In short, Walmart's moat is stable, but any expansion depends on how well the company executes in creating its own ecosystem.

What does it mean for investors?

Walmart is unlikely to become a hypergrowth technology company. That is not its identity.

Instead, it offers something different: A large, resilient cash flow engine with incremental-margin upside optionality.

Its competitive advantages exist, rooted in scale and infrastructure. But whether that advantage expands or remains stagnant will depend on how well the company executes.

All eyes are on the company's performance in the coming quarters.

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Lawrence Nga has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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