Walmart bets on its international business to drive growth as it expands in China, Mexico

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Walmart (WMT), America's biggest retailer, is doubling down on its ambition to be a global behemoth.

"International is one of the better stories going on at Walmart, and it's not fully appreciated," CFO John David Rainey told Yahoo Finance following its second quarter results. "International is going to contribute more to the top line and more to the improvement in the bottom line over the next five years than the rest of the business."

In Q2, operating income for its international segment jumped 14.3%, while net sales increased 7.1% and e-commerce sales grew 18%. As cautious American consumers flock to value, Walmart's stock has been a star performer in 2024, with a year-to-date gain of 50%.

Internationally, the company is finally seeing returns after years of rightsizing. Its global footprint peaked at 6,363 locations outside the US in 2016.

Former CEO of Walmart International, Judith McKenna, took over in 2018 and quietly exited businesses in Brazil, Argentina, the UK, and Japan.

As of Q2, Walmart has 5,414 foreign locations in 18 countries. Kath McLay, who previously served as the CEO of Sam's Club, took the helm last September following McKenna's retirement.

CFRA analyst Arun Sundaram said divesting some of their "unprofitable international businesses or their slower growing international business" was the most important step Walmart took to improve the profit trajectory of the segment.

McLay told Yahoo Finance that Walmart has been "tailoring the portfolio to be in the right markets."

"I'm happy with the portfolio that we've got. We're always open to explore opportunities, but I'm not actively pursuing other markets to go into it," she said.

The company is focusing on key markets like China, India, and Mexico. Similar to the US, value is at the core of its business.

"In each market, it's really, really important for us to maintain everyday low price principles and to focus on price gap and price perception," McLay said.

Read more: Best credit cards for back-to-school shopping at Walmart (September 2024)

In India, Walmart primarily operates through local e-commerce firm Flipkart, which it owns a majority stake in. It also has a stake in digital payments firm PhonePe. After years of operating at a loss, Flipkart is now focused on delivery growth and profitability.

In Q2, Flipkart's revenue grew by double digits, per Rainey. "Scale and delivery density are key. As more customers are shopping with us more often across more categories, we're improving delivery density and transaction-level margins," he said.