The post Forget Walmart: This E-Commerce and Fintech Giant Is Growing 40% YoY and Is a Better Buy appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Walmart (NYSE:WMT) is the comfort trade of 2026, hitting fresh highs on the back of a 29% one-year gain and a reputation as the retailer that always finds a way. But here’s what you should actually be watching.
Walmart now trades at a trailing PE of 43 and a forward PE of 41, which is what investors used to pay for hyper-growth software. What are they getting for it? Quarterly revenue growth of 7.3% YoY, a net profit margin of 3.14%, and a dividend yield of 0.79%. The most recent quarter barely cleared the bar: revenue of $175.68B grew 6.1% YoY while adjusted EPS of $0.66 narrowly beat expectations, both rounding errors.
The real tell is underneath the headline. Free cash flow turned negative at $1.9 billion as capex surged 34% YoY to $6.68 billion. Operating cash flow fell 12.4% YoY. Return on investment slipped 40 basis points to 14.9%. And management is still flagging IEEPA tariff uncertainty as an unresolved risk. This is a mature retailer paying a growth multiple while its cash generation goes the wrong way. The PEG ratio sums it up: 4.77.
MercadoLibre (NASDAQ:MELI) is the Latin American e-commerce and fintech operator the headline-chasers are ignoring, and that is exactly the setup retirement money should want. Three reasons it belongs in the portfolio Walmart is crowding out.
1. Growth velocity that is not slowing. Q1 2026 revenue hit $8.85 billion, up 49.03% YoY, the company’s strongest growth rate since Q2 2022. Commerce grew 47% YoY; fintech grew 51% YoY. Brazil revenue grew 55% YoY in USD, Mexico 62%. Operating cash flow more than doubled to $2.08 billion, +119.81% YoY.
2. A fintech engine built for inflation. Mercado Pago’s monthly active users hit 83 million, +29% YoY, with AUM near $20 billion, +77% YoY. The credit portfolio grew 104% YoY to $6.6 billion with 2.7 million cards issued in the quarter. With over half of Mexico’s population using informal credit and Argentina credit-to-GDP at one-fifth of Brazil’s level, this is structural penetration with a long runway.
3. Valuation and insider conviction line up. MELI’s PEG ratio is 0.98 against a forward PE of 31. Director Alejandro Aguzin spent open-market dollars on 600 shares at roughly $1,655 on May 22, 2026, the kind of deliberate accumulation boards rarely do at tops. Analyst consensus sits at $2,216.96 against today’s $1,646.36, with the stock down 30.59% over the past year. That is the discount.
Walmart at 43 times earnings with shrinking cash flow is a crowded defensive trade dressed up as a growth story. MercadoLibre at 42 times trailing earnings is growing ten times faster, compounding a fintech book at triple digits, and trading well below its 52-week high of $2,645.22. For retirement investors weighing the two, the data points to a wide valuation and growth gap, with MELI trading at a discount to consensus while WMT trades at a growth multiple on decelerating cash flow.
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The post Forget Walmart: This E-Commerce and Fintech Giant Is Growing 40% YoY and Is a Better Buy appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


