--- title: "Is It Too Late to Buy Costco Stock?" description: "Costco stock has seen significant growth and is currently valued at around 50 times the next 12 months' expected earnings. Investors are concerned about the stock's high valuation but also don't want " type: "news" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/210669173.md" published_at: "2024-08-04T10:46:27.000Z" --- # Is It Too Late to Buy Costco Stock? > Costco stock has seen significant growth and is currently valued at around 50 times the next 12 months' expected earnings. Investors are concerned about the stock's high valuation but also don't want to miss out on potential gains. While the stock may be overpriced, it remains a reliable and resilient company. The decision to buy should be based on qualitative factors and a judgment call, rather than waiting for a specific entry price. Overall, Costco is considered a fantastic long-term holding. With shares of **Costco Wholesale** (COST 0.64%) up more than 60% since early last year, investors may be a bit hesitant to dive into a new position. Giving them even more pause is the fact that the stock's valued richly, at around 50 times the next 12 months' expected earnings. They're understandably concerned that there's just no upside left to tap. The thing is, investors are right to entertain these doubts. Just don't get too comfortable being part of the pessimistic crowd. Costco stock has a funny habit of performing far more bullishly than it seems it should. ## Is it too good for its own good? You probably know the company: Costco is a club-based discount retailer. It boasts over 70 million paid memberships and more than 130 million total cardholders, who are paying either $65 or $130 per year for the right to shop at one of its 878 stores. Most of them are located in the United States, although Costco has a small brick-and-mortar presence outside of the U.S. as well. In its fiscal 2023, which ended Sept. 3, it did over $242 billion worth of business, turning $6.3 billion of that revenue into net income. More important, it's good at what it does. It may be the best in the business, in fact, even though it competes directly with power players like **Walmart**'s warehouse-retailing unit Sam's Club. Costco's been doing this since opening its first store in an airplane hangar all the way back in 1976, when it was still called Price Club. And there's the conundrum for would-be buyers. Even if it's not a high-growth company, Costco *is* a reliable grower. Its top line hasn't failed to grow on a year-over-year basis in any quarter in over a decade, while its profit growth has been almost as consistent. Investors want to plug into this resilience, and are even willing to pay a premium for it. They're just not great at tapping the brakes when the stock gets too far ahead of its underlying earnings. ## Can you make sense of Costco stock's crazy price action? That's exactly what's happened here since early last year, although the steep run-up that followed started with a disadvantage already in place. That is, Costco shares were also red-hot because of the COVID-19 pandemic. For perspective, in addition to its 65% gain since the beginning of 2023, Costco's stock is up an incredible 170% since the end of 2019, and 400% since the end of 2016. Sales and earnings are up for this time frame, but not nearly to the same degree. The result? Costco shares' trailing price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio rose from around 25 then to a little over 50 now. That's rich even by the standards of popular technology stocks. COST data by YCharts. Most investors understand that the stock is currently overpriced, or at least near fully valued -- it's near analysts' consensus target of just under $890 per share. The fear of missing out on the next leg of its bullish momentum, however, is also palpably strong. That's at least some of the reason the stock's peeled back from its early July peak. Returning to the original question: Is it too late to buy Costco stock? The answer is ... a little. But how much is "a little?" That's the problem. As much as many investors would like a decisive, quantitative entry price for Costco, it's not in the cards. This is a stock that ebbs and flows on internal and external qualitative factors; there's a "feel" to it. Here's what can be safely said right now: Shares are valued about as richly now as they have been in 25 years. Just look at the chart below, showing its P/E ratio over time. COST PE Ratio data by YCharts On the flip side, don't be too picky about your entry price. If you're waiting for this stock's P/E ratio to slide back to the mid-20s like it was a few years ago, forget it. If investors start cooling on it, just look for signs that the selling has run its course and the stock's starting to attract buyers again. It's a judgment call, and you'll know it when you see it. Probably. And if you don't happen to get in near the exact low, that's OK too. You're still stepping into a fantastic long-term holding. It'll be fine given enough time. ## Over time, the company matters more than the stock That can certainly be a frustrating concept, particularly to newer investors who like things numerically neat and tidy. *Some* stocks work that way. However, most of them don't. Don't sweat it. Get used to it, in fact. As one of the Motley Fool's core philosophies explains, you invest in companies -- not stocks. Look for quality companies, and their stocks will take care of things in time. Costco stock's certainly done that plenty over its history, even with a sky-high valuation. And, that's precisely why it's not too late to buy it, provided you're truly looking five or more years down the road. That's also why your exact entry price doesn't matter. If your time frame is only five weeks, though ... well, that's a different story. Costco shares could easily be priced lower five weeks from now than they are now, but that has more to do with the unpredictable market environment than with the company itself. Trying to time your trade entries, when you're really only looking at the short term, is a dangerous game. ### Related Stocks - [COST.US - Costco Wholesale](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/COST.US.md) ## Related News & Research | Title | Description | URL | |-------|-------------|-----| | 分销商和零售商面临错失特朗普关税退款的风险 | 缺乏进口商身份的分销商和零售商可能会错失 1750 亿美元的关税退款,这源于美国最高法院推翻了特朗普施加的关税。包括开市客和博格华纳在内的 1800 多家进口商已提起退款诉讼。然而,非进口商面临复杂的退款流程,可能无法合法索取退款。分销商警 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276475209.md) | | 开市客因旋转烤鸡的安全声明遭到起诉 | 好市多公司正面临一项提议的集体诉讼,指控其烤鸡产品可能存在沙门氏菌污染风险。诉讼称,好市多在内布拉斯加州的鸡肉加工厂存在沙门氏菌感染,且公司未能告知顾客相关危害。投诉人丽莎·泰勒(Lisa Taylor)认为,由于这些未披露的污染问题,她为 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276054729.md) | | 特朗普暗示违法征收的关税不退了,美财长称今年关税收入将 “基本保持不变” | 美国总统特朗普暗示不会退还被最高法院裁定违法的关税,预计 2026 年关税收入将保持不变。特朗普计划签署行政令,对全球商品加征 10% 进口关税,取代被推翻的关税。财长贝森特表示,政府将利用替代法律权力维持关税收入,强调国家安全和财政收入不 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276494362.md) | | 美财政部让步,拟修订主权财富基金税收提案,此前遭私募业警告 | 美国财政部正就一项针对主权财富基金和公共养老基金征税方式进行全面改革的提案作出让步。相关提案此前由美国国税局提出,拟更新税法第 892 条,将这些基金持有的多数美国债务投资归为商业活动,这将令其面临被征税的风险。此前,私募信贷和私募股权公司 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276491732.md) | | 传言成真?英伟达对 OpenAI 的 “1000 亿美元投资” 最终 “打了三折” | 据报道,英伟达正接近敲定对 OpenAI 最高 300 亿美元的股权投资,取代此前官宣的 1000 亿美元合作框架。原有协议因条款分歧与内部疑虑未能落地,黄仁勋亦曾强调其不具约束力。此次新融资轮规模或超 1000 亿美元,OpenAI 估值 | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276507066.md) | --- > **Disclaimer**: This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.