Amazon is seeing strong momentum in e-commerce. In the first quarter, e-commerce unit sales grew 15% year over year — the highest growth since the end of the pandemic.
Consumers are spending money again, and it could reflect tax relief. As of April 2, the IRS reported that tax refunds were up by more than 10% compared to 2025.
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Amazon likely won’t be the only retailer reporting strong results this quarter. Here are two other top retail stocks to watch.
1. Walmart
Walmart (NASDAQ: WMT) is positioned to benefit from improving consumer spending trends. In an economy where consumers are still value-conscious but spending money, Walmart’s “everyday low prices” can thrive.
The company will report fiscal first-quarter earnings results on May 21. Sales are expected to grow 5% year over year to reach $172 billion, virtually all of which will come from existing stores. Earnings are expected to increase by 8% to $0.66 per share.
Importantly, Walmart is growing e-commerce much faster than Amazon. E-commerce sales surged 24% year over year in the fiscal fourth quarter — far surpassing Amazon’s 8% increase in Q4 2025 and 9% in Q1 2026.
Walmart is benefiting from investments in artificial intelligence (AI), such as the Sparky shopping assistant. Customer engagement has been strong, with Sparky users typically spending about 35% more per order.
Other high-margin revenue opportunities, such as memberships (e.g., Walmart+) and advertising, should support earnings growth. These opportunities stem from Walmart’s e-commerce business and are important areas to watch in upcoming earnings reports.
However, it’s unclear how much upside the stock offers from here. The forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is 45, which is quite expensive for a company growing earnings at single-digit rates.
2. TJX Companies
TJX Companies (NYSE: TJX) is built to thrive in almost any economic environment. It’s the leading off-price retailer (TJ Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods, Sierra, and Homesense). The stock has climbed 122% over the last five years, despite high inflation hitting consumers’ wallets.
What stands out is that TJX has reported sales growth every year, except one (2020), over the past 20 years. Comparable-store sales grew 5% year over year in the fiscal fourth quarter, with adjusted earnings up 16%.
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