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3 Reasons to Buy Costco Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

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Everybody loves Costco Wholesale (NASDAQ: COST). Customers love the prices. Employees love the above-average pay and perks, explaining why turnover clocks in at a mere 8% annually. Employee turnover for retailers in general runs closer to 60%. Even investors love Costco, despite the stock's seemingly lofty valuation.

I'll address the valuation sticking point shortly, as it's actually one of the three reasons to buy shares of the warehouse club operator like there's no tomorrow.

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1. Always bet on winners

Pick a starting line, and odds are investors have fared well buying into the country's leading membership-based shopping experience. Costco stock is up 6% so far during this volatile year. It's a welcome contrast to the S&P 500's 10% year-to-date slide. Let's zoom out. Costco is up 35% over the past year, 71% over three years, and 239% over five years. Go all the way back to the original starting line, and Costco is a whopping 383-bagger since going public 32 years ago.

Bears will argue that the valuation is stiff, and that's a fair shot. Costco is trading for more than 50 times trailing earnings, a sky-high sum for most investments. Its revenue multiple of 1.6 may seem reasonable, but that's steep in the sleepy low-margin realm of groceries and other non-discretionary retail.

The stock is not cheap on paper. When Mizuho analyst David Bellinger initiated coverage of Costco last week, he went with a neutral rating. He gushes about the company's strong fundamentals and insulation from the tariffs malaise. With enemies like these, who needs friends? He ultimately feels the shares are fairly valued, but that's the point. There's not much of a bearish argument beyond the price, but the same thesis was the case for those lukewarm about the stock a year, three years, and five years ago. Costco just keeps winning.

A shopper going over merchandise at a warehouse club.
Image source: Getty Images.

2. It's more than a dividend hike

Costco stock opened higher on Thursday after the company announced a higher payout. The boost isn't a surprise. It stretches its streaks of annual hikes to a juicy 20 years. Raising its quarterly distributions from $1.16 to $1.30 per share may seem like a lot, but the annualized rate of $5.20 doesn't amount to much when a stock is approaching a price tag of $1,000. It's a meager yield just above 0.5%.

The warehouse club leader does announce one-time special dividends every few years. The last time that Costco did this was in late 2023, with a record $15-per-share disbursement. It does add another 1.5% yield at today's price tag, but that's not a regular event. There aren't a lot of people buying Costco primarily for the payouts.