Walmart BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Walmart has been making plenty of headlines this week, starting with a huge settlement in California over alleged scanner price overcharges and false advertising. The Los Angeles Times reports Walmart agreed to pay 5.6 million dollars to resolve claims it charged customers more than advertised, including baked goods and produce sometimes weighing less than packaging labels promised. The settlement requires Walmart to step up its pricing accuracy in California, a familiar issue as they faced similar accusations back in 2012. According to the Sonoma County District Attorney, Walmart must now put regional compliance teams on the job to make sure shoppers really get what they pay for.
Turning to business news, Walmart just dropped 6.5 billion dollars on Canadian expansion, their largest investment since entering the country thirty years ago, according to a Thursday press release cited by PYMNTS. Over the next five years, Walmart Canada plans dozens of new stores, five Supercentres opening by 2027, and a major new distribution center scheduled for spring 2025. In a twist, they’re also selling their Canadian truck fleet to Canada Cartage—insiders say this streamlines their logistics so they can focus on growth and let the pros handle the trucks.
Stateside, Walmart’s U.S. e-commerce operations have turned profitable for the first time in 2025, with International Supermarket News highlighting a 20 percent cut in fulfillment costs and delivery speeds nearly doubling. Behind the curtain is Sparky, Walmart’s new AI shopping assistant, now live in their app and part of a suite of “super agents”—AI tools for buyers, store associates, and suppliers. These tech upgrades aren’t just behind the scenes: in stores, new smart checkout lanes with computer vision and even some robots scan shelves and change prices in real time.
In its ongoing bid to not just be the biggest but also the coolest, Walmart is trying out a bit of Gen Z magic with a tour called Walmart Delivers. The Street and Walmart’s own event page spell out the campaign: five flashy mobile stores, each with a vibe—think K-Pop, lo-fi gaming, and wellness—rolling out to music festivals and marathons in big cities this fall. It’s tailor-made for TikTok-age shoppers, promising photo ops and themed giveaways, though coverage on The Street points out the “hip” branding may not quite land with everyone above 35.
On social media, Walmart kept a steady beat in family life, with influencers like Simple Wife Simple Life sharing grocery hauls on YouTube that spotlight affordable meal planning. Meanwhile, marketers continue to study trends that started with Walmart, like the viral Gen Z Stare, still churning through X and Reddit. So whether it’s the courtroom, the checkout line, or the TikTok feed, there’s never a dull moment in the Walmart universe—always innovating, sometimes litigating, and determined to be part of your next selfie.
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