Weiss Valuation: Where Does WMT Stand Today?
At 0.73%, WMT's current yield is near the bottom of its 10-year historical range (0.86%–2.53%). By the Weiss method this indicates that the market is pricing the stock for optimism — investors are paying a premium relative to the income the stock generates. The historical median yield is 1.65%, suggesting the stock is trading well above fair value.
The undervalued price threshold — the level at which WMT historically becomes an attractive buy — currently sits at $38.16. The overvalued threshold, above which the stock is historically expensive, is $111.84. The current price of $131.93 places the stock above the overvalued band — a signal to review position sizing.
Dividend Quality Assessment
Walmart Inc. scores 57/100 on DividendVisual's quality scale — an Average rating. The dividend is likely safe but warrants closer scrutiny on payout coverage. Key metrics: a 34% payout ratio, the dividend consumes 75% of free cash flow, growing at 5.5% annually over the past 5 years.
Walmart Inc. has maintained its dividend without a cut for 9 years, establishing a meaningful income track record.
The current payout ratio is 34% — a conservative level that leaves significant room for future increases and protects the dividend in a downturn.
10-Year Yield History
Over the past decade, Walmart Inc.'s dividend yield has ranged from a low of 0.86% (when the stock was most expensive relative to its dividend) to a high of 2.53% (when it was most attractively priced). The historical median yield — a reasonable proxy for fair value — is 1.65%.
Investors who consistently bought WMT near its historical yield maximum and held for 3–5 years have, historically, earned both above-average income and above-average capital appreciation as the yield mean-reverted toward the median. This is the core logic of yield-based valuation: price and yield are inversely related, so buying high yield means buying low price.
Income Projection: What WMT Could Generate
A $10,000 investment at the current price and yield would generate approximately $73 in year-one income. With dividends reinvested and a 5.5% annual growth rate maintained, that same investment would produce roughly $138 per year in income by year 10 — a yield on cost of 1.4%.
These projections assume no share price appreciation — only the compounding effect of reinvested dividends at a constant price. In practice, share price changes will affect the total return. The projection is intended to illustrate the power of dividend reinvestment over time, not to predict a specific outcome.
Key Risks to Consider
Walmart Inc.'s dividend appears well-supported by current earnings and cash flow. No material red flags are flagged by the quality model, though macro risks (rising rates, sector disruption) always apply.
Beyond company-specific factors, all dividend stocks carry interest rate risk: when rates rise, income investors have alternatives, and dividend stock valuations tend to compress. Walmart Inc.'s position in the Consumer Defensive sectorshould be evaluated in the context of your portfolio's overall rate sensitivity.
Bottom Line
At current prices, Walmart Inc. is trading at historically elevated valuations relative to its dividend yield. Income investors may find better entry points elsewhere in the dividend universe. Existing holders have no urgent reason to sell — the dividend remains intact — but initiating a new position here means accepting below-median long-term income returns relative to cost.