A MARTÍNEZ, HOST:
Walmart is the world's largest retailer, where lots of people go in person to get a stick of butter or maybe a pair of socks. But now it's telling investors to think of it more like a tech company. Next week, Walmart is even switching to a techy-er stock exchange. NPR financial correspondent Maria Aspan has more.
MARIA ASPAN, BYLINE: For more than 50 years, Walmart stock has traded on the New York Stock Exchange. It's centuries old and the original power center of Wall Street. Here's the closing bell at its historic trading floor.
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ASPAN: But now Walmart is moving uptown to the rival NASDAQ. It's a younger stock market, and it doesn't even have a physical trading floor. That's all done electronically. What NASDAQ does have is the business of big tech companies. It's where Google stock trades and Apple and Nvidia, and crucially, Walmart's megarival, Amazon.
TOMAS JANDIK: Walmart, by joining NASDAQ, I think, would like to signal that traders, investors should be looking at Walmart more closely as Amazon direct competitor rather than all-time discount retailer.
ASPAN: That's Tomas Jandik. He's a corporate finance professor at the University of Arkansas, near Walmart's hometown. Amazon, of course, does more than just e-commerce. It also has a massive cloud business. But Walmart still wants more of the tech action. Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey explained the NASDAQ change to investors using buzzwords like tech-powered and AI.
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JOHN DAVID RAINEY: Walmart is setting a new standard for omnichannel retail by integrating automation and AI to build smarter, faster and more connected experiences for customers.
ASPAN: Rainey also has some personal ties to Walmart's new trading home. He was on NASDAQ's board of directors until 2023. Walmart declined to comment beyond its official announcement. NASDAQ also declined to comment, while a New York Stock Exchange spokesperson said via email that the company is proud to have been a partner to Walmart.
There is some money at stake. It's generally cheaper for companies to list shares on the NASDAQ than on the New York Stock Exchange, though we're talking pocket change for a company as big and profitable as Walmart. Still, Jandik points out that pinching pennies plays into Walmart's reputation as a discount store.
JANDIK: In the world of Walmart, it's so much on brand, right? Save money. Live better.
ASPAN: Saving money is still a goal no matter how much AI or tech branding Walmart now wants to embrace.
Maria Aspan, NPR News, New York. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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