Wal-Mart shares surged to an all-time high, jumping more than 8 percent Thursday after the world's largest retailer showed it can hold its own in a challenging retail environment.
Same-store sales for its U.S. locations climbed for the 13th-consecutive quarter, as the big-box retailer cited a bright spot in its food business and a boost from shoppers stocking up on hurricane supplies.
The Arkansas-based company reported strong growth online, with e-commerce sales soaring 50 percent in the fiscal third quarter, a year after it acquired Jet.com. That's a slower pace than in the prior period when digital sales were up 60 percent.
Wal-Mart also raised its full-year earnings expectations, taking an aggressive stance heading into the important holiday season.
Here's what Wal-Mart reported, compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a Thomson Reuters survey of analysts:
- Earnings of $1 a share, excluding items, compared with a forecast profit of 97 cents per share.
- Revenue was $123.18 billion, versus an estimate of $121 billion.
- Same-store sales for U.S. stores, excluding fuel, climbed 2.7 percent, compared with an anticipated increase of 1.8 percent.