Stock Market Today (7/26/22): Walmart Inflation Woes Give Stocks a Scare – Kiplinger's Personal Finance

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A profit warning from the nation's largest retailer ahead of a busy stretch of corporate earnings sent stocks lower at the start of Tuesday's trading, and the selling continued as the session wore on.
Late Monday, Walmart (WMT) said that it now expects second-quarter earnings per share to be down 8% to 9% year-over-year and operating income to fall at least 13%, compared to May guidance for both metrics to be flat to up slightly. 
"The increasing levels of food and fuel inflation are affecting how customers spend, and while we've made good progress clearing hardline categories, apparel in Walmart U.S. is requiring more markdown dollars," said Doug McMillon, CEO at Walmart, in the company's press release. The company also cut its full-year profit forecast, as it expects even more pressure on general merchandise over the next two quarters.
WMT stock slid 7.6% on the news – making it easily the worst-performing Dow Jones stock today – and other retailers like Target (TGT, -3.6%) and Dollar Tree (DLTR, -6.3%) fell in sympathy.
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The selling weighed on the broader benchmarks as well, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average shedding 0.7% to end at 31,761, while the S&P 500 Index gave back 1.2% to 3,921. The Nasdaq Composite was the biggest decliner, though, sinking 1.9% to 11,562, as cybersecurity stocks Zscaler (ZS, -9.1%) and Palo Alto Networks (PANW, -7.9%) tumbled.
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Ongoing concerns about inflation were also evident in the latest consumer sentiment data that hit the Street today. Specifically, the Conference Board's consumer confidence survey for July fell to 95.7 from June's 98.4, marking its third straight monthly decline and the lowest reading since February 2021. Survey participants continued to cite rising gas and food prices as their main worries. 
"As the Fed raises interest rates to rein in inflation, purchasing intentions for cars, homes, and major appliances all pulled back further in July. Looking ahead, inflation and additional rate hikes are likely to continue posing strong headwinds for consumer spending and economic growth over the next six months," the report indicated.
The latest rate hike from the Federal Reserve is due out tomorrow, with the market pricing in a 75 basis-point (a basis point is one-one hundredth of a percentage point) increase. However, "the Fed has indicated nothing's off the table for this Wednesday's meeting and that will sway markets one way or another," says Jeff Klingelhofer, co-head of investments at Thornburg Investment Management. The central bank has to nail this, he adds. "Too high of a hike will send markets spiraling and too low will keep inflation burning hot." 
For investors, the uncertainty can be unnerving, but Klingelhofer says the best thing they can do in today's market is to get defensive via high-quality fixed-income plays and dividend-paying stocks. Another way for investors to prioritize defense is with low-volatility stocks, which can provide stability to portfolios amid the market's twists and turns. Here, we take a look at 10 top-rated names that fit this bill.
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