Key Points
- Chewy expands beyond e‑commerce with physical veterinary clinics and health services.
- Walmart leverages its extensive store network and advertising business to dominate global retail.
- Investors must decide which giant fits a long‑term portfolio.
Investors are weighing whether Chewy (NYSE:CHWY) or Walmart (NASDAQ:WMT) offers the best balance of growth and stability as online and offline shopping converge in 2026.
The case for Chewy
Chewy leads the online pet market with a high‑touch service model and subscription revenue. It serves roughly 21.3 million active customers and partners with about 20,000 veterinary practices. The acquisition of Modern Animal in April 2026 added physical clinics to its digital platform.
For the year ended Feb. 1, 2026, revenue reached $12.6 billion, up 6.2% year‑over‑year, and net income was $222.8 million, yielding a net margin of 1.8%. The balance sheet showed a debt‑to‑equity ratio of 1.1× and a current ratio of 0.9×. Free cash flow was $562.4 million, though stock‑based compensation accounted for about 43% of operating cash flow.
The case for Walmart
Walmart operates an omnichannel retail model across 19 countries, reaching nearly 280 million weekly shoppers. Its advertising business, bolstered by the Vizio acquisition, drives additional revenue.
For the fiscal year ended Jan. 31, 2026, Walmart reported revenue of $713.2 billion, a 4.7% increase, and net income of $21.9 billion, delivering a net margin of 3.1%. The debt‑to‑equity ratio was 0.7×, with a current ratio of 0.8×. Free cash flow totaled $14.9 billion, supporting dividends and growth initiatives.
Risk profile comparison
Chewy faces competition from online and physical rivals, including Amazon, and relies on third‑party cloud services, exposing it to cybersecurity risks. Regulatory compliance in pet health and pharmacy is also critical.
Walmart must invest heavily in AI and supply‑chain automation to stay ahead of Amazon and Target. Legal challenges, inflation, and shifts in consumer spending pose additional risks to its scale.
Valuation comparison
Walmart trades at a higher forward P/E (39.6×) versus Chewy’s forward P/E of 26.6×. Chewy’s price‑to‑sales ratio is 0.7×, lower than Walmart’s 1.3×.
| Metric | Chewy | Walmart | Sector Benchmark (XLY) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forward P/E | 26.6× | 39.6× | 91.6× |
| P/S ratio | 0.7× | 1.3× | n/a |
Sector benchmark uses the SPDR XLY sector ETF. Valuation metrics sourced from Financial Modeling Prep.
Which stock would I buy in 2026?
Both companies cater to essential consumer spending but differ in focus. Chewy’s autoship subscriptions generate recurring revenue from pet necessities, while its new veterinary clinics add diversified services. However, discretionary pet spending has softened and competition remains fierce.
Walmart’s vast product range, omnichannel presence, and consistent dividend increases provide a more diversified and stable growth story. Its scale enables steady earnings and robust cash flow generation.
Given these dynamics, I would select Walmart for its diversification, dividend history, and stronger profitability at scale.
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