Walmart CEO Doug McMillon to Retire in 2026
Walmart US Chief John Furner to Take Over
Bloomberg News
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Walmart Inc. CEO Doug McMillon, who over a decade ushered the big-box behemoth into the internet age, will retire in February. He鈥檒l be replaced by U.S. head John Furner 鈥 long viewed as the heir apparent.
Furner, 51, takes over as Walmart faces a fast-moving shift toward artificial intelligence, an uneven U.S. economy, and a rapidly changing global workforce. The company recently听inked听a partnership with OpenAI, which will allow shoppers to directly make purchases through ChatGPT. The retailer has听said听automation has helped it keep head count steady at about 2 million employees globally.
Investors were initially rattled by the change at the top, with the company鈥檚 shares sliding as much as 3.6% on Nov 14. They pared those losses and were trading down 1% as of 12:15 p.m. in New York.
鈥淲almart is closing out its chapter associated with building a well-rounded digital foundation, and is now moving into the escalation and acceleration of AI,鈥 Mizuho analyst David Bellinger said.
McMillon 鈥 who became CEO in 2014 鈥 said he had worked with Furner for 20 years and that his leadership would take the company to the 鈥渘ext level.鈥 Furner is 鈥渦niquely capable of leading the company through this next AI-driven transformation,鈥 he said.

John Furner has been head of Walmart U.S. since 2019. (Anna Rose Layden/Bloomberg)
Like McMillon, 59, Furner has spent decades at the world鈥檚 largest retailer. His father also worked at Walmart, and he grew up on farms in Arkansas before starting at the company as a part-time worker in the garden center at a Bentonville supercenter.
鈥淚鈥檝e been around the company since I was 3 years old,鈥 Furner told Bloomberg News in an interview earlier this year.
The new chief has also been 鈥渋ntimately involved鈥 in Walmart鈥檚 increasing use of technology and AI, according to Truist Securities analyst Scot Ciccarelli, and now his task is 鈥渢o continue to execute against the game plan they have already put in place.鈥
During a town hall meeting on Nov. 14, McMillon received multiple standing ovations from staffers, according to people familiar with the matter who weren鈥檛 authorized to speak publicly. When asked if he planned to run for president of the U.S. 鈥 a nod to McMillon鈥檚 active involvement in Washington across multiple administrations 鈥 he told employees there was 鈥渮ero chance,鈥 these people said.
Furner joined McMillon on stage at Sam Walton Hall, a 200,000-square-foot building at the company鈥檚 new sprawling headquarters. He promised to meet with global teams and immediately dive into the depths of the global business.
鈥淎s we head into the holiday season, my priority is leading the U.S. segment to a strong finish,鈥 Furner said in a memo to employees reviewed by Bloomberg News.
He said he was excited to 鈥済uide us through this next era鈥 and that he was 鈥渇ocused on supporting a seamless leadership transition for the year ahead.鈥

Walmart said Furner鈥檚 new compensation hasn鈥檛 yet been set.听
The company, which often rotates senior executives around its big divisions, said it will announce Furner鈥檚 successor before the end of the 2026 fiscal year. Walmart鈥檚 U.S. business is the retailer鈥檚 crown jewel with hundreds of billions of dollars in sales, making the chief of the division a crucial role.
Turning Point
McMillon鈥檚 retirement marks the end of an era for Walmart, the world鈥檚 largest retailer and US employer. McMillon, who started working at Walmart in his teens, rose up the ranks to CEO in 2014 and transformed the retailer into a digital powerhouse consisting of e-commerce, advertising and membership businesses. He managed to quell decades of labor unrest by raising wages and providing better worker benefits.听
In an interview earlier this year with Bloomberg at the company鈥檚 Bentonville, Ark., headquarters, McMillon reflected on the shift to e-commerce in the early 2000s.
鈥淚t was very clear to me that that was a really important part of the future,鈥 McMillon said. 鈥淭here were debates internally as to how aggressive we should be, and I was always on the aggressive side of that.鈥
Since he took the helm more than a decade ago, Walmart鈥檚 shares have more than quadrupled. The stock had gained 13% this year as of the Nov. 13 close, slightly trailing the rise of the S&P 500 Index.
When asked earlier this year how much time he had left in the role, McMillon declined to provide an immediate timeline.
鈥淚 shouldn鈥檛 stay here forever, but I sure do like what I do, and I don鈥檛 know what else I鈥檓 going to do,鈥 McMillon said in the interview. 鈥淚鈥檓 starting my 12th year, and it has flown by.鈥
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McMillon鈥檚 retirement decision was his own and the board accepted his notice when it met for a standing meeting this week, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to speak publicly. The timing of the announcement was managed in consultation with the board and chair, the person said.
He鈥檒l stay on the board until June and will remain an adviser to Furner through fiscal year 2027. McMillon will serve as an executive officer with a $1.5 million salary. Walmart agreed to move up the vesting of his 2028 stock awards to the prior year.
A Walmart spokeswoman said the leadership transition was 鈥減lanned and thoughtful鈥 and marks the next step in the company鈥檚 long-term strategy. The two previous CEO transitions followed a similar pattern of occurring at the end of the year with the outgoing boss remaining on the board and as an adviser for a period of time, she said.听
The company is expected to report third-quarter earnings next week.
AI Shift
In a memo to employees, McMillon thanked his colleagues for being willing to go along with him in one of the biggest transformations in corporate America and urged them to get ready to face another monumental shift in how the company did business.
鈥淭here have been times when some people doubted us,鈥 he said in the memo, which was viewed by Bloomberg News. 鈥淭hose people underestimated how much you care, and they underestimated your ability to change.鈥澨
Before taking the helm of Walmart鈥檚 largest and most important business in 2019, Furner ran the company鈥檚 warehouse division Sam鈥檚 Club. He also spent three years in China helping lead the division there, an experience that he said shaped his view on ever-evolving businesses.听
鈥淲hat I learned was how fast you can move when you don鈥檛 have the constraints of a lot of physical legacy,鈥 Furner said.听
Furner led Walmart鈥檚 U.S. operations, which includes more than 4,600 stores, through the pandemic and navigated an unprecedented rush to online delivery as well as a massive supply chain breakdown that upended the business.
Over the last few years, he also helped remodel its fleet of stores to make them more modern and overhauled the back-end technology that powered the company鈥檚 massive global supply chain. He鈥檚 had to contend with everything from how a听rise in GLP-1s听is impacting consumer spending to egg shortages and tariff upheaval.
鈥淛ohn checks a lot of the same boxes鈥 as McMillon, said Bradley Thomas, managing director of KeyBanc Capital Markets. 鈥淗e really started as an hourly employee and rose up through the ranks. That鈥檚 important for the culture.鈥
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The company veteran, who talks with AI while driving to work, has said that the future of retail will be determined by a mix of humans and tech.听
鈥淲e have a lot more work to do, but in 2025, with artificial intelligence, the data we have, our understanding of how those assets can work flexibly is quite an exciting opportunity,鈥 Furner told Bloomberg News in an interview earlier this year.
Walmart ranks No. 1 on the Transport Topics Top 100 list of the听largest private carriers in North America.
