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Walmart Stock Slides As Amazon's Grocery Delivery Expansion Heats Up Price War And Challenges Margins
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Walmart (NYSE:WMT) stock dropped after Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) expanded its U.S. grocery delivery service to all customers in over 3,500 cities.

Amazon previously limited the service largely to Prime members. The Seattle-based conglomerate now offers same-day delivery from Amazon Fresh and Whole Foods to everyone (Prime members receive lower fees).

The move leverages Amazon’s scale to capture more grocery market share and pressures rivals’ pricing and margins.

Meanwhile, Walmart expanded its employee discount to cover nearly all grocery purchases made in-store and online.

Effective immediately, the country’s largest private employer now applies its 10% discount—previously limited to fresh produce and general merchandise—to year-round purchases of items like milk, pasta, frozen pizza, and meat.

Also Read: Walmart’s Bold AI Overhaul Could Drive Efficiency, Margins And Market Edge

This was “one of our most requested benefits,” according to Walmart Chief People Officer Donna Morris.

U.S. employees become eligible after 90 days of employment. Clearance items are excluded, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Walmart announced the update to store managers at a holiday-season planning meeting in Houston, positioning itself closer to competitors such as Target (NYSE:TGT) and Amazon-owned Whole Foods, which offer broader and sometimes higher discounts from day one. The move comes amid elevated prices for food staples despite a recent pause in monthly inflation, as reported in the July consumer price index.

The retailer has recently introduced a series of benefits, including higher store manager pay and new bonus opportunities for hourly staff.

Walmart stock gained nearly 13% year-to-date, topping the S&P 500 Consumer Staples Sector Index’s over 6% returns.

Price Actions: Walmart stock was down over 2.4% at $101.10 at last check on Wednesday. AMZN is up 1.05%.

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