Hindustan Times (Jammu)

World’s richest family loses $11.4 billion in Walmart rout

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The Walton family fortune fell $11.4 billion on Tuesday after Walmart Inc. slashed its earnings outlook for the second time this year.

Shares of the Bentonvill­e, Arkansas-based retailer, which is controlled by the family, tumbled 7.6% in New York trading after it said adjusted earnings per share will decline as much as 13% this year with US shoppers reining in spending on bigticket items amid soaring consumer prices. Two months ago, the company said earnings per share would only dip about 1%, while in February, it had predicted a modest increase.

Read more: Walmart Tumbles Most in S&P 500 as Forecast Warning Sows Gloom

The family’s late patriarch,

Sam Walton, built the business around a discount culture that has in the past helped buoy its stock during recessiona­ry times. In revising its outlook, Walmart cited the cost of reducing merchandis­e stockpiles that customers were increasing­ly reluctant to buy as inflation hits a four-decade high.

Walton’s three surviving children, Alice, Jim and Rob, daughter-in-law Christy and Christy’s son, Lukas, own just under half of the retailer. That gives them a combined net worth of about $199.3 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, down almost 11% since the first of the year.

Walmart wasn’t the only retailer to see its shares tumble. Canadian e-commerce firm Shopify Inc. fell 14% Tuesday after Chief Executive Officer Tobi Lutke acknowledg­ed the company’s decision to expand rapidly coming out of the Covid-19 pandemic didn’t pay off. As a result, the firm said it planned to cut about 10% of its workforce. Tuesday’s decline shaved $383 million from Lutke’s net worth, dropping the 41-year-old co-founder’s fortune to about $3.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg index. Ottawa-based Shopify’s shares have plunged 77% this year. The Walton family, which owns its Walmart stake through various trusts, has stepped up its stock sales in recent years. They unloaded $6.2 billion in shares last year, which the company has said is part of a strategy to keep the family’s stake under 50% amid buybacks. Those sales, along with outside investment­s in US stocks and low-cost ETFs, has armed them with ample funds for acquisitio­ns.

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