Amazon’s Making It Tough To Be A Costco Shareholder

 | Jul 19, 2017 02:22PM ET

Amazon’s (NASDAQ:AMZN) purchase of Whole Foods (NASDAQ:WFM) has rocked the retail industry to a great extent. One casualty (of many) has been Costco (NASDAQ:COST) whose stock price took a 7% hit after news of the acquisition broke on June 16th. Costco is in a unique position where it is actually membership fee hike could add as much as $250 million in operating profit on an annualized basis. But these factors will likely continue to be overshadowed by the constant growth and disruption of Amazon. As Amazon increases its warehouse and delivery station network in the U.S. over the next few years, market sentiment towards retailers like Costco will likely only get worse. And given the high forward PE ratio of 26.5x where Costco currently trades, there is still downside momentum for the stock.

Value investors should keep their distance from Costco for the time being.

h3 Improving Same Store Sales Growth/h3

The low same-store-sales growth Costco achieved in 2016 was mostly due to overall deflationary strain in the economy. Its decision to stop selling tobacco products also negatively impacted last year’s results. However, the company has made a strong comeback in the last few months.

Excluding the impact of changes in gas prices and foreign exchange the comp growth figure for the U.S. in recent research report by Consumer Intelligence Research Partners (CIRP), Amazon has more than 80 million Prime members in the U.S. which represents a whopping 64% of the total 125 million households in the U.S.

This percentage is also greater in higher income households. Last year Piper Jaffray estimated that Prime penetration in households having an annual income above $112,000 has moved beyond 70%. This number has likely further increased within the last year. Amazon can claim to have almost ubiquitous Prime membership among high-income households.