logo
Could Costco Be a Millionaire-Maker Stock?

Could Costco Be a Millionaire-Maker Stock?

Globe and Mail3 days ago

Costco (NASDAQ: COST) just reported financial results on May 29. Revenue totaled $63.2 billion, while diluted earnings per share (EPS) came in at $4.28. Both these headline figures exceeded Wall Street estimates. Shares are up 4% since the news (as of June 2), helping drive a 14% gain so far in 2025.
Costco dominates the retail landscape. And it has certainly generated sizable wealth for some of its very early investors. But could buying this retail stock right now make you a millionaire one day?
Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »
Costco's momentum
Costco once again showed that its business is largely unscathed from the uncertain macro environment. Same-store sales climbed 5.7% in Q3. This was mostly driven by robust growth in foot traffic. E-commerce comparable sales soared 14.8%, with strong demand for items like jewelry, home furnishings, and apparel.
Like other retailers, Costco is navigating the uncertain tariff situation. The leadership team has raised prices on some goods, while leaving other items untouched. Moreover, Costco has been working on adjusting its supply chain to minimize the impact of higher costs and to find any efficiencies.
Having such a big presence in terms of selling groceries and gas, for example, can protect Costco when consumers feel pressure from the economic situation. These are essential items that households need, regardless of what's happening. Always being viewed as a top shopping destination helps the business.
Costco's staying power
It's important for investors to understand the competitive landscape that businesses must deal with. Companies with durable competitive advantages are the ones that should stand the test of time. Viewed in this light, it's clear Costco possesses an economic moat.
The business has tremendous scale, as demonstrated by the $62 billion in merchandise sales it reported in Q3. Given that the typical Costco warehouse has just 4,000 stock-keeping units for sale, much lower than the average supermarket, the company is perhaps the largest buyer for the goods that it acquires from suppliers. Consequently, Costco has incredible negotiating leverage.
These cost savings are passed to consumers in the form of everyday low prices. There's a positive feedback loop at play that has and will continue to power Costco forward. And because shoppers have come to expect a superior experience, Costco has unrivaled brand recognition in the industry.
Technology impacts all markets. And with the rise of online shopping in the past couple decades, the retail sector isn't immune. Amazon has arguably been Costco's biggest threat in recent memory. But even with its popular Prime membership program winning over consumers, Costco has continued to grow its membership base, with a strong worldwide renewal rate of 90.2%.
People still love to shop in person. Investors should gain confidence by Costco's ongoing success.
Costco's forward returns
In the past 35 years, shares of Costco have produced a monster total return of 8,020%. This means a $12,400 investment made back in June 1990 would be worth a cool $1 million today. Is it possible that something similar can happen again in the future?
Investors should focus on two key factors that can impact the stock's performance. The first is EPS, which is expected to grow at a compound annual rate of 11.3% between fiscal 2024 and fiscal 2027, according to Wall Street consensus analyst estimates. That's not too exciting, which is understandable, given how big Costco's operation is nowadays.
Another variable to consider is the valuation. As of June 2, Costco shares trade at a nosebleed price-to-earnings ratio of 60.7. This is extremely expensive, and probably the only reason investors should avoid buying the stock. The valuation showcases how much love the market has for Costco.
This is an outstanding business. However, I don't believe Costco will make you a millionaire one day.
Should you invest $1,000 in Costco Wholesale right now?
Before you buy stock in Costco Wholesale, consider this:
The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Costco Wholesale wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.
Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $657,385!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $842,015!*
Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor 's total average return is987% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to171%for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.
See the 10 stocks »
*Stock Advisor returns as of June 2, 2025
John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Neil Patel has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon and Costco Wholesale. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Homeless people with most acute needs overlooked for Ottawa supportive housing, audit finds
Homeless people with most acute needs overlooked for Ottawa supportive housing, audit finds

CBC

time41 minutes ago

  • CBC

Homeless people with most acute needs overlooked for Ottawa supportive housing, audit finds

Homeless people with the most complex needs are being overlooked on wait lists for the city's supportive housing, according to a new report by the office of Ottawa's auditor general. The report presented to the audit committee on Friday looked into the city's supportive housing program. This program aims to reduce homelessness by providing housing with additional services and support, which experts say is essential as homelessness often overlaps with complex mental health and addiction issues. The city administers funding from all levels of government to fund supportive housing providers, but the audit found that resources are stretched thin. While the city receives capital funding from the federal and provincial governments, these levels of government do not provide additional funding for ongoing operational costs. "The city is then left in a constant state of reactivity to try to find the operating funds to support this critical type of housing," the audit found. "The current level of operating funding is not sufficient to address the needs of individuals with higher acuity levels or more complex needs," it continued. The audit found the city allocated $10.7 million in capital funding and $15.3 million in operating funding to supportive housing last year. In 2023, it allocated $24.8 million for capital funding and $11.3 million for operating funding. Service providers told the auditors that they do not always receive funds for required repairs to buildings. Demand for accommodation in supportive housing exceeds supply, resulting in a wait list. But the wait list is not prioritized based on need or how long people have been waiting. Due to resource constraints, service providers may not choose applicants with the most complex needs. "Individuals who have been in the system the longest and potentially require intensive or specialized supports may never get housed because their needs are considered too high for the available supports," audit principal Rhea Khanna told the audit committee. People who live near supportive housing complexes have raised safety concerns. Community housing in Wateridge Village is an example of how capital investment has not been matched by needed support funding, according to Roxanne Field, president of the Wateridge Village Community Association. On land that was formerly part of Canadian Forces Base Rockcliffe, the city built three zero-carbon, eco-friendly buildings providing 271 affordable housing units, including 57 fully accessible units. But Field said there is insufficient support on site, resulting in regular emergency services calls to the buildings. "These people are terrified, angry and stressed out; they do not feel safe in their own home, and this is not OK," she told the committee on Friday. "This is out of control," she said, adding that people with serious mental health and addiction issues are "just not getting the care they need." Coun. Rawlson King, whose Ward 13 Rideau-Rockcliffe includes Wateridge, said the report highlighted the need for greater funding for wraparound services. "What we really need is the federal and provincial governments to step up to recognize that their capital investments are meaningless without corresponding operating and health funding," he said. "We simply can't continue expecting municipalities to absorb these costs while simultaneously demanding we balance budgets and maintain service levels."

New AI tools promise real-time translation so you don't have to. But is that a good thing?
New AI tools promise real-time translation so you don't have to. But is that a good thing?

CBC

time41 minutes ago

  • CBC

New AI tools promise real-time translation so you don't have to. But is that a good thing?

There's a suite of new and upcoming tools designed to make translation between languages easier and faster than ever before — some, with the help of artificial intelligence. At their I/O 2025 event, for example, Google revealed a live translation service it's added to its Google Meet videoconferencing tool. A demonstration showed two people speaking to each other — one in English, one in Spanish — with their speech translated into the other language with a short, seconds-long delay. The computer-generated voice mimicked the original speaker's voice and intonation. Roger J. Kreuz, a professor at the University of Memphis who specializes in the psychology of language, said Google's live translation demonstration was "a pretty amazing technological achievement," but its staged nature left questions about how it will work in a real meeting. "Conversations are rarely as clean as the conversation that we saw in the demo," he said. "They typically will overlap or interrupt, and I can only imagine the cacophony that would occur if people were kind of excitedly talking back and forth ... and voices cutting in and then cutting back out again. How is that controlled?" Experts caution tools like this raise big questions about what might get lost in translation. Because while tech companies often tout these tools as scientific and objective, language doesn't really work that way in the real world. In March, Bloomberg reported that Apple is planning to update their AirPod earbuds to allow them to translate languages from speech it hears on the fly. (Google's rival product, the Pixel Buds, have had this feature for years, the report said.) Apple's reported foray into the live translation game is notable, says WIRED journalist and senior business editor Louise Mataskis, because the company typically doesn't introduce new tech features as quickly as others. "They tend to hold back until that technology is really mature and that there is a good sense that it's gonna be reliable. So I think that this shows that this technology is really starting to mature," she told The Sunday Magazine's Piya Chattopadhyay. Google's speech translation currently only features translation between English and Spanish, and it's available only in the U.S. to anyone paying for their Google AI Pro premium services. The company says it doesn't save users' audio, no AI models are trained using your voice, and the feature is opt-in only. A representative from Google told CBC the service will add more languages "in the next few weeks." They said the feature uses an AI large language model called AudioLM, developed by Google DeepMind. 'Do you have a toilet in your house?' Mataskis says language tools can help people practice learning languages, but cautions that while the tools or apps often present themselves as neutral — i.e. there's only one right way to translate a word or phrase — it might miss important contextual or cultural variations. "In Mandarin, we don't give people possession of things at their job. So you would never say, in Mandarin, 'do you have a bathroom?' You would say, 'where is the bathroom in this place?'" Mataskis, who used Google translate when she first started learning Mandarin abroad in Taiwan, got quizzical looks when asking the former in coffee shops. "Often these baristas would look at me funny and I didn't realize that basically I was saying 'do you got a toilet in your house?'" What's more, the kind of translations you get can inform how a tool's language database was trained. Mataskis says that as she's learned more Mandarin, her "hunch" is that translation tools use Chinese state media texts. "It's sort of using these like, honorifics to refer to the Chinese Communist Party. Or, like it can be sort of stifled in the way that state media and or government documents are often — you know, sort of very dry and use a lot of formal language," she said. Kreuz notes that, historically, translation apps have had trouble detecting and properly translating sarcasm or homophones. He ran into the latter when the Turkish translation for one of his books apparently missed the mark on the title. "I put the title into Google translate. This is 2018. Apparently, literally, it meant: How to Achieve Fluency in a Foreign Language. And what it gave me was: How To Earn Fluency on Foreign Dildos, which was just bizarre," he said. WATCH | AI coming to classes around Canada AI coming to classes around Canada 16 days ago Duration 1:54 AI is now a daily tool for many but experts say it's still not widely understood. The Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute, AMii, is getting a $5 million gift from Google to shape artificial intelligence courses at 25 post-secondary institutions across Canada. Language as biodiversity Muhammad Abdul-Mageed, Canada Research Chair in natural language processing and machine learning, says that companies should take extra care when building AI translation tools for international languages that may have little in common with European ones. Certain sounds an English speaker makes, for example, may have no equivalent in Arabic, which could present challenges for tools expected to make instant translations. "We cannot really paint all these languages with the same brush, in a sense," he said. Abdul-Mageed has been doing work with African languages of late, in the hopes of helping develop sophisticated tools to translate between them as easily as a Google or Apple might focus on English and other European languages. Doing the work to preserve languages can be seen as another way of preserving biodiversity, he argues — and advances in machine learning and other technologies could be powerful tools to do so. "We want to preserve the animal kingdom, the plant kingdom, and so on. Language is part of us, right? And if we let certain languages go, we are letting parts of us go," he said. As convenient as live translation can be, it's no substitute for learning and eventually becoming fluent in a second or third language on your own. Mataskis says she's spoken to researchers who have found that learning more languages can improve your brain's neuroplasticity. "So there's quite literally health benefits to learning a second language," she said. She wants to encourage people to use any of the new language tools, including those powered by AI, as a potential learning aid rather than a crutch. Using it that way can help set you up for the next, possibly best nonacademic setting to learn: going to the bar with a friend fluent in that language and just hanging out and talking together.

He can't quit him — easily. Why SpaceX could complicate the Trump-Musk split
He can't quit him — easily. Why SpaceX could complicate the Trump-Musk split

CBC

time43 minutes ago

  • CBC

He can't quit him — easily. Why SpaceX could complicate the Trump-Musk split

Billions of dollars lost in government contracts. A slew of regulatory headaches. These are just some of the ramifications Elon Musk could face over his fallout with U.S. President Donald Trump. The two men may have personally split, at least for now. But if Trump is seeking to retaliate against the tech billionaire, severing the relationship between Musk's many companies and the U.S. government could prove difficult, analysts say. "I would say the president has more cards than Musk does, but it doesn't mean that [Musk] doesn't have any," said Peter Hays, a lecturer of space policy and international affairs at George Washington University's Space Policy Institute. Both sides have "all kinds of leverage on each other," added Dan Grazier, senior fellow and program director at the D.C.-based Stimson Center, a think-tank focused on international security. The public fallout came after Musk repeatedly criticized Trump's spending bill. Trump eventually lashed back, posting on Truth Social that the easiest way to save "Billions and Billion of Dollars" would be to "terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts." However, those threats might not be so simple to implement. SpaceX, satellite contracts SpaceX has $15 billion US worth of contracts from NASA for the company's Falcon 9 rockets and its development of the multipurpose Starship rocket system, tapped to land NASA astronauts on the moon this decade. The company has also been awarded billions of dollars to launch most of the Pentagon's national security satellites into space while it builds a massive spy satellite constellation. That's why, if Trump cancels those contracts, SpaceX would have to seriously rethink its business model, Grazier says. Musk "needs the government to keep his company operating as they are," he said. But the U.S. government is also reliant on SpaceX, he says. For example, it's the only U.S. company capable right now of transporting crews to and from the International Space Station, using its four-person Dragon capsules. "Trump needs Elon Musk in pretty much the exact same way that Elon Musk needs President Trump, as far as SpaceX goes," Grazier said. "It's not like the United States has a credible alternative to SpaceX right now as far as space launch goes," he said. "And the United States needs reliable space launch capabilities." WATCH | F eud explodes into public view: Threats, insults as Trump-Musk feud explodes into public view 1 day ago Duration 2:27 Tearing up SpaceX contracts would have a huge domino effect across a lot of the government's critical functions in space, according to Clayton Swope, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. And those functions are "most closely centred around the Pentagon and NASA," he told Bloomberg News. But if Trump holds off on cancelling SpaceX contracts, and is looking for another way to poke at Musk, he could put the squeeze on Musk's companies through the government's regulatory agencies, some experts say. "Those can all be leverage points for the administration," said Cary Coglianese, director of the University of Pennsylvania's Penn program on regulation. Last year, Musk was waging at least 11 separate regulatory or legal battles with the Biden administration or independent federal agencies related to his business empire, according to NBC News. This might have been why, in part, Musk eventually endorsed Trump, who had pledged during the presidential campaign to slash regulations. How Trump's tax bill ignited his feud with Musk | Hanomansing Tonight 1 day ago Duration 7:21 Yet Trump could now pressure those same agencies to make Musk's life difficult. Just some of the regulators Musk's business empire must deal with include the Federal Communications Commission for his satellite internet service Starlink, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for Tesla, and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for SpaceX. The FAA, under pressure from Trump, or to curry his favour, could say it's not going to approve any SpaceX launch permits, says Roger Nober, director of the Regulatory Studies Center, also at George Washington University. For Tesla, for example, Trump could pressure regulators to deny necessary approvals of its autonomous driving program, or could renew investigations into the safety of its full self-driving software, some analysts told ABC News. "If full self-driving were to be invalidated, that would be a huge hit to Tesla stock and to Musk," Gordon Johnson, CEO and founder of the data firm GLJ Research, told ABC. Although the courts shouldn't tolerate such actions if they are shown to be vindictive, the president wouldn't necessarily need a "litigation-proof strategy to really mess up" Musk's life, Coglianese said. It could still be "very painful and problematic" for Musk, while courts sorted out the issues, he said. "And if Musk's operations get delayed or disrupted, that can mean real money." Nober says he believes that any lasting regulatory change against Musk's companies would be difficult to implement, given his very public spat with Trump and that the president said he's going to punish his one-time friend. "If they then initiate regulatory action that's intended punish any of Musk's business… it's going to be vulnerable to challenge on the theory that it was arbitrary," he said. However, there may be other minor administrative regulatory roadblocks that government agencies could impose on Musk that would be difficult to challenge in court, Nober says. "They can make life difficult" for Musk, he said. On Thursday, amid their war of words, shares of Tesla plunged more than 14 per cent, leaving $150 billion US of the electric automaker's value erased by the end of trading day. The plunge was probably because Tesla, like a lot of Musk's companies, have a lot of little things they deal with, with a lot of regulatory bodies, Nober says. "Just making those more difficult, or slowing them down, or reviewing them, or taking longer to turn things around, has a cumulative impact," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store