Costco‘s Valuation Cannot Keep Stretching Indefinitely

 | Dec 08, 2023 12:39AM ET

If it wasn’t for Walmart (NYSE:WMT) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Costco (NASDAQ:COST) would be the biggest retailer in the US and the world. The late Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett’s right-hand man, was not only a shareholder but once said he was “obsessed” with the company. With over 860 warehouse stores, a strong brand, more cash than debt, and steadily rising sales, earnings, and dividends, Costco really has it all.

The company went public in 1985 and has been in a continuous uptrend ever since. Currently above $607 a share, the stock is once again flirting with a new all-time high. That doesn’t mean it hasn’t had its fair share of bear markets, though. The bigger ones include a 72% crash in the early-1990s, a 57% selloff in 2000, a 49% plunge in 2008-9 and a 34% drop in 2022. The bottom line is that even a great business such as Costco is not immune to the vagaries of Mr. Market.

At its present valuation, the company trades at a forward P/E ratio of nearly 40. This is a demanding multiple no matter how you slice it. Even more so for a company, which is already quite big. The question investors are probably asking themselves right now is, does Costco ‘s high quality justify paying such a high price for the stock? We’ve been wondering the same thing, but a quick look at the chart below gave us a pause.