Walmart de México y Centroamérica reported a 5% growth in third-quarter 2025 revenues, reaching 239.795 billion pesos, driven by sales in Mexico. Despite moderate consumption, the company opened new stores and bolstered its pricing strategies. However, net profit declined 9.2%.
Walmart de México y Centroamérica recorded total sales of 239.795 billion pesos in the third quarter of 2025, a 5% increase from the previous period, according to its report to the Mexican Stock Exchange. In Mexico, sales reached 200.567 billion pesos across 3,214 units, including formats like Bodega Aurrera, Walmart Supercenter, and Sam's Club. In Central America, sales totaled 40.953 billion pesos, with 2.5% growth in countries such as Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Costa Rica, and Guatemala.
Operating cash flow rose 3.3% to 25.266 billion pesos, though net profit fell 9.2% to 11.747 billion pesos. An alternative source reported 4.9% sales growth to 241.520 billion pesos, with new stores contributing 1.8% to the total. In Mexico, same-store sales increased 3.9%, outperforming the National Association of Supermarkets and Department Stores (Antad) average, due to a 4.5% higher average ticket from pricing campaigns at Bodega Aurrera and private labels.
General expenses grew 4.5% from investments in new stores, technology, and associate value, offset by operational efficiencies and a labor provision in Mexico. Following Ignacio Caride's resignation, Cristian Barrientos took over as executive president. “Our strategy and long-term plan remain consistent... acceleration of e-commerce,” Barrientos stated. Kathryn McLay, CEO of Walmart International, praised Barrientos: “Cristian is a visionary leader with deep understanding of our customers and partners.” The company is confident in its business resilience for the rest of the year.