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Why is Walmart buying shopping malls?
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Good morning. Fifty-three-year-old Jaromír Jágr just suited up for his 38th professional hockey season, taking the ice for his hometown team, Kladno, in the Czech league. Jagr, who is second on the NHL’s all-time points list, started playing pro hockey in 1988, before the Berlin Wall fell. Over the years, his dedicated fan base has definitely grown. No word on whether his phone’s font size has, too.

Holly Van Leuven, Brendan Cosgrove, Neal Freyman

MARKETS: YEAR-TO-DATE

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  • Markets: This week on Wall Street may be another wild ride, with lots of major earnings reports and fresh inflation data due to arrive. The government shutdown also begins its third week, but that hasn’t affected markets nearly as much as President Trump’s ongoing trade war with China has. Last Friday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he would meet with his Chinese counterpart this week, and that tensions have “de-escalated.”
 

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REAL ESTATE

A Walmart store in Maryland

Alexander Farnsworth/Getty Images

While Americans are buying trash bags and Great Value soda at Walmart, Walmart is buying…malls.

The big-box colossus just snagged a Norwalk, CT, retail plaza for $44.5 million, beating out a “substantial” amount of interest in the space by laying out the juiciest offer, according to Jeff Kintzer, a principal at Royal Properties, which represented the seller.

A Walmart store anchors the shopping center, so the chain moving from lessee to owner doesn’t inspire much intrigue by itself. As the New York Times reported, Walmart already owns most of its locations. But the deal is part of an emerging pattern:

  • In May, Walmart bought another shopping center in Bethel Park, PA, where it was also the anchor tenant.
  • Perhaps most interestingly, Walmart bought a different Pennsylvania mall in January—where it had no retail presence.

Monroeville Mall (Walmart’s Version)

Walmart purchased the Monroeville Mall in Western Pennsylvania for $34 million. Perhaps coincidentally, it wanted a store in the town of Monroeville 20 years ago, but got denied by local authorities. In what might be a revenge move a la Taylor Swift, Walmart buying the mall can clear the pathway into the market far more easily than getting approvals and building a site from scratch.

The chain has not commented on its plans in Monroeville, but it applied for a $7.5 million redevelopment grant from the state of Pennsylvania to support the “full demolition” of the mall and to build new retail, restaurant, and entertainment venues.

What in the (Wally) world? In 2018, Walmart publicly announced a plan to reimagine spaces around its stores as “town centers” that could include local food vendors, gyms, and recreation centers. The Monroeville acquisition might be part of that. Who among us is not a little behind on our New Year’s resolutions?—HVL

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WORLD

Gustavo Petro

President Gustavo Petro at the UN in September. Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Trump announces plan to stop aid to Colombia, US’ longtime Latin American ally. Yesterday, the president posted remarks to Truth Social that denigrated Colombian President Gustavo Petro as “an illegal drug leader strongly encouraging the massive production of drugs” across Colombia. He also announced all forms of aid or subsidies to the country would be cut off because of what President Trump sees as Petro not doing enough to stop the flow of drugs from Colombia to the US. Colombia had been receiving around $700 million in aid per year from the US in the recent past, but that figure dropped to $230 million in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, according to the Associated Press. Petro denied the accusations and accused the Trump administration of assassinating an innocent Colombian fisherman in a missile strike last month, for which Petro said he would initiate legal proceedings against the US.