Walmart: From a Small-Town Arkansas Store to the World's Largest Company by Revenue
COMPANY DEEP DIVE: Walmart — $681B Revenue FY2025 — 2.1M Employees — 270M Weekly Customers — World's Largest Company by Revenue
Global Business · Retail · Consumer · Company Story

Walmart: From a Small-Town Arkansas Store to the World's Largest Company by Revenue

How Sam Walton opened a single discount store in Rogers, Arkansas in 1962 with one obsession — pass every supplier saving to the customer — and built the world's largest company by revenue at $681 billion, employing 2.1 million people across 10,750 stores in 19 countries and serving 270 million customers every single week.

15 min readBy Robert
$681BFY2025 Revenue
2.1MEmployees Worldwide
270MWeekly Customers
10,750+Stores in 19 Countries
$19.4BFY2025 Net Income
1962Year Founded

Sam Walton and the Obsession With Low Prices

Samuel Moore Walton was born in 1918 in Kingfisher, Oklahoma, shaped by a Depression-era childhood that gave him a lifelong understanding of what price means to families living close to the edge. After serving in the US Army Intelligence Corps during World War II, Walton opened a Ben Franklin franchise variety store in Newport, Arkansas in 1945 with a $25,000 loan from his father-in-law. He immediately distinguished himself by travelling to suppliers, negotiating better deals, and passing the savings to customers rather than keeping the margin. His store outsold every other Ben Franklin franchise in the region.

When his Newport landlord refused to renew his lease, Walton relocated to Bentonville, Arkansas. He had a theory: rural and small-town customers were being ignored by national retailers who focused only on large cities. They wanted the same range of products and the same low prices as city shoppers, and nobody was giving it to them. On July 2, 1962, Walton opened the first Wal-Mart Discount City store in Rogers, Arkansas. The message was on the door: lowest prices, every day, for everyone.

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The Supply Chain Revolution That Changed Retail Forever

Walmart's rise to dominance was not built on marketing or brand personality. It was built on logistics. Walton understood earlier than almost any retailer that the real competition in discount retail happens not on the shop floor but in the supply chain. Every dollar saved in transportation, warehousing, and procurement flows directly to the price difference between Walmart's shelf and a competitor's. From the 1970s onward, Walmart invested systematically in distribution infrastructure: its own truck fleet, regional distribution centres positioned to replenish stores daily, and eventually a proprietary satellite network that gave Walmart real-time inventory data across all its stores before most retailers had computerised their back offices.

The supplier relationship model Walmart pioneered was equally transformative and equally controversial. Walmart's scale gave it purchasing power to dictate terms in ways that were unprecedented. Major consumer goods companies assigned dedicated teams to work on-site at Walmart's Bentonville headquarters, sharing production data to meet Walmart's replenishment demands. Suppliers wanting access to Walmart's enormous customer base had to accept thin margins, continuous price pressure, and complete transparency about their cost structures. Walmart's leverage effectively transferred value from manufacturers to consumers, which was precisely what Sam Walton intended.

"There is only one boss. The customer. And he can fire everybody in the company from the chairman on down, simply by spending his money somewhere else." Sam Walton, Walmart founder

Revenue Growth: Becoming the World's Largest Company

Fiscal YearRevenue (USD)Net Income (USD)
FY2000$165 billion$5.4 billion
FY2005$285 billion$10.3 billion
FY2010$405 billion$14.3 billion
FY2015$482 billion$16.4 billion
FY2020$524 billion$14.9 billion
FY2024$648 billion$15.5 billion
FY2025$681 billion (+5.1%)$19.4 billion
Walmart's $681 billion in fiscal 2025 revenue makes it the largest company in the world by revenue, ahead of Amazon at $638 billion and Saudi Aramco at $480.6 billion. For context, Walmart's annual revenue exceeds the entire GDP of the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, and Switzerland. Despite this scale, Walmart's net income margin of approximately 2.9% reflects the fundamentally thin-margin nature of discount retail, where competitive pressure and consumer price sensitivity limit profitability no matter how efficient the operation.

Milestones: Six Decades of Retail History

1945
Sam Walton opens his first Ben Franklin franchise in Newport, Arkansas. Immediately outperforms every other franchise through supplier negotiation and price discipline.
1962
First Wal-Mart Discount City store opens in Rogers, Arkansas on July 2. The founding principle: lowest prices, every day, for rural customers nobody else is serving.
1972
Walmart lists on the New York Stock Exchange. IPO raises capital for national expansion. Bentonville, Arkansas becomes permanent global headquarters.
1983
Sam's Club wholesale membership warehouse launches, creating a second format targeting small businesses and bulk buyers.
1988
First Walmart Supercenter opens, combining full grocery with general merchandise. The supercenter format becomes the primary growth vehicle for three decades.
1991
First international store opens in Mexico. Walmart begins its global expansion that eventually reaches 19 countries.
1992
Sam Walton dies on April 5, aged 74. The Walton family becomes one of the wealthiest in the world. The company continues under professional management.
2016
Acquires Jet.com for $3.3 billion, the largest US eCommerce acquisition at the time, bringing digital talent and urgency to Walmart's online strategy.
2018
Acquires 77% of Flipkart, India's largest eCommerce platform, for $16 billion, Walmart's biggest ever acquisition.
2025
FY2025 revenue $681 billion, net income $19.4 billion. Global eCommerce grows 22%. Advertising reaches $4.4 billion growing 27%. Raises annual dividend 13% to $0.94 per share.

Walmart's Global Business Segments

Walmart US
$462.4B Revenue
4,600+ US locations. Supercenters, Neighbourhood Markets, eCommerce. Grocery drives foot traffic; general merchandise drives margin.
Sam's Club
$86.2B Revenue
600+ US warehouse clubs. Membership model competing directly with Costco. Plus tier membership growing rapidly among high-income shoppers.
India
Flipkart Ecosystem
77% of Flipkart plus Myntra fashion and PhonePe payments. India's largest eCommerce ecosystem serving 500M+ internet users.
International
$114.6B Revenue
Mexico, Central America, Canada, China. Walmex is Mexico's largest retailer. International grew 4.8% in FY2025.
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The Amazon Battle: From Threat to Credible Digital Rival

For most of the 2010s, Walmart appeared to be losing the war with Amazon. Its eCommerce efforts were disjointed and late. The company that had built the world's most efficient physical supply chain struggled to translate those advantages into digital. The wake-up call came as Amazon's grocery ambitions, formalised with the Whole Foods acquisition in 2017, directly targeted Walmart's core business. Walmart responded with urgency. It acquired Jet.com in 2016, launched Walmart+, its $12.95 per month membership programme directly competing with Amazon Prime, and began converting its 4,600+ US store network from a perceived liability into a last-mile fulfilment asset.

Global eCommerce net sales grew 22% in Q4 fiscal 2025. The advertising business, Walmart Connect, grew 24% in the US and 27% globally to $4.4 billion in fiscal 2025, using Walmart's massive first-party purchase data to offer brands targeting capabilities that rival Amazon Advertising. Walmart's physical store network, once seen as Amazon's greatest advantage over the incumbent retailer, is now its own competitive moat: no purely digital retailer can replicate same-day delivery at Walmart's cost structure without owning equivalent physical infrastructure across the country.

According to BBC Business, Walmart's transformation into a credible omnichannel and advertising business represents one of the most successful corporate reinventions in retail history, with a company founded on physical store excellence now generating high-margin digital revenue streams that would have seemed impossible a decade ago.

Walmart's fiscal 2025 operating income grew faster than its 5.1% revenue growth, as higher-margin businesses including advertising, membership fees, and marketplace commissions became a larger share of the total. Walmart Connect, its US advertising platform, grew 24% in fiscal 2025. The advertising business carries margins dramatically above Walmart's retail average. If the advertising business continues scaling at current rates it could contribute $8-10 billion in annual revenue by 2028, materially reshaping Walmart's overall profitability profile from a low-margin retailer toward a diversified consumer platform.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Walmart was founded by Sam Walton on July 2, 1962, when he opened the first Wal-Mart Discount City store in Rogers, Arkansas, built on the principle of passing supplier savings directly to customers through permanently lower prices.
Walmart reported fiscal year 2025 revenue of $681 billion, a 5.1% increase from $648 billion in fiscal 2024. Walmart US contributed $462.4 billion, Sam's Club $86.2 billion, and Walmart International $114.6 billion. Net income was $19.44 billion.
Walmart employs approximately 2.1 million associates worldwide as of fiscal year 2025, making it the world's largest private employer. Approximately 1.6 million of those employees are in the United States.
Walmart operates more than 10,750 stores across 19 countries as of fiscal year 2025. Approximately 4,600 US locations operate under the Walmart, Walmart Supercenter, and Sam's Club banners.
Walmart's market capitalisation reached approximately $700 to $750 billion in early 2025, making it one of the most valuable retailers in the history of global equity markets.
Walmart competes with Amazon through Walmart+ membership at $12.95 per month, 22% global eCommerce growth in Q4 FY2025, a $4.4 billion advertising business growing 27%, and its 4,600+ US store network that doubles as same-day delivery fulfilment infrastructure.

What Comes Next?

Walmart's most important strategic priorities for 2025-2027 are accelerating its advertising business, scaling Walmart+ membership, and deepening its healthcare and financial services offerings. Walmart Health clinics, though scaled back in 2024 after some closures, represent a long-term bet on capturing a share of the $4 trillion US healthcare market by embedding primary care access into its store footprint.

Internationally, Flipkart's path to a standalone IPO in India remains a key value unlock. India's consumer market is one of the fastest-growing in the world and Flipkart's leadership position, combined with PhonePe's payment infrastructure, gives Walmart exposure to a decades-long growth opportunity that has no ceiling comparable to the relatively saturated US retail market.

Watch: Walmart+ membership growth trajectory, Walmart Connect advertising scaling, Flipkart IPO timeline, any new healthcare strategy announcements, eCommerce margin improvement, and Sam's Club performance versus Costco.

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