Wall Street Pro Thinks Casey’s General Stores Stock Will Continue to Soar

Photo of Joel South
By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Casey’s General Stores (CASY) expanded fuel margins to 41.0 cents per gallon in Q3 FY2026, driving total fuel gross profit up 15.3% to $348.2 million, while its Rewards program surpassed 10 million members and powered inside same-store sales growth of 4.0% with margin expansion of 130 basis points to 42.2%. The company targets at least 80 new store openings in FY2026 and has delivered 26 consecutive years of dividend increases with the most recent raise at 14%.

  • Moderating crude oil prices and expanding convenience store profit margins from fuel volatility position Casey’s for durable earnings growth, though margin pressures from its chicken wings expansion and elevated valuation at 33.56x forward P/E create near-term headwinds.

  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.(Sponsor)

This post may contain links from our sponsors and affiliates, and Flywheel Publishing may receive compensation for actions taken through them.
Wall Street Pro Thinks Casey’s General Stores Stock Will Continue to Soar

© ablokhin / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

Casey’s General Stores (NASDAQ:CASY) has been a standout performer, with shares up 6.22% over the past week, 3.82% over the past month and 27.35% year-to-date. Over the trailing 12 months, the stock climbed 66.29%, recently touching a 52-week high of $721.50.

The Street consensus target sits at $722.03 with a “Moderate Buy” rating. JPMorgan analyst Thomas Palmer initiated coverage at Neutral with a $719 price target — roughly 10% upside from the stock’s recent range near $714. Whether CASY can realistically reach $719 by end of 2026 depends on several key drivers.

Thomas Palmer’s $719 CASY Prediction

Palmer’s thesis centers on a clear tailwind: Convenience stores should see profit tailwinds for multiple quarters from recent fuel price volatility. Casey’s fuel margin expanded to 41.0 cents per gallon in Q3 FY2026, up from 36.4 cents per gallon in the prior year, driving total fuel gross profit up 15.3% to $348.2 million. Palmer also flags Casey’s push into chicken wings will likely bring margin headwinds in its Prepared Foods business, tempering his enthusiasm enough to stay at Neutral despite the constructive setup.

Key Drivers of CASY Stock Performance

  1. Fuel margin expansion: With WTI crude moderating to $64.51 per barrel in February 2026 versus $75.74 a year earlier, Casey’s fuel economics remain favorable. Sustained margin per gallon above 40 cents compounds directly into EBITDA growth, which management has guided at 18% to 20% for FY2026 — raised from a prior range of 15% to 17%.
  2. Inside sales momentum and loyalty scale: Casey’s Rewards has surpassed 10 million members, powering inside same-store sales growth of 4.0% in Q3 FY2026. Inside margin expanded roughly 130 basis points to 42.2%. This loyalty-driven repeat traffic supports durable, compounding revenue for long-term investors.
  3. Store expansion and acquisition integration: Casey’s is targeting at least 80 new store openings in FY2026 and approximately 500 total store additions over its three-year plan. The company has also delivered 26 consecutive years of dividend increases, with the most recent dividend raise at 14%.

What Will It Take for CASY to Reach $719?

At 36,959,000 shares outstanding, a $719 price target implies a market capitalization of roughly $26.6 billion, modestly above the current ~$26.4 billion market cap. Reaching that level requires continued fuel margin strength through the back half of FY2026, inside margin holding near 41.5% to 42.5% guided range despite the chicken wing rollout, and clean execution on store growth.

The primary risk is valuation — at a trailing P/E of 40.98x and a forward P/E of 33.56x, any earnings stumble could compress multiples quickly. For retirement investors seeking a defensive compounder with genuine fuel tailwinds, a growing loyalty base, and nearly three decades of dividend growth, JPMorgan’s $719 target reflects a credible, measured destination for patient long-term capital.

Photo of Joel South
About the Author Joel South →

Joel South has been an avid investor and financial writer for over 15 years, publishing thousands of articles analyzing stocks, markets, and investment strategies across multiple leading financial media platforms. He spent 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he worked as an investment analyst and Bureau Chief before ascending to direct the Fool.com investing news desk, overseeing editorial operations and content strategy. During his tenure, Joel co-hosted an investing podcast and became a recognized voice in financial media through numerous TV and radio appearances discussing stock market trends and investment opportunities.

Currently serving as General Manager and Managing Editor at 24/7 Wall Street, Joel has published hundreds of in-depth analyses focusing on large-cap stocks, dividend-paying equities, and market-moving developments. His comprehensive coverage spans earnings previews, price predictions, and investment forecasts for major companies across all sectors—from technology giants and semiconductor manufacturers to consumer brands and financial institutions. Joel's expertise encompasses t fundamental analysis, options market interpretation, institutional investor behavior, and translating complex market dynamics into clear, actionable insights for individual investors.

Featured Reads

Our top personal finance-related articles today. Your wallet will thank you later.

Continue Reading

Top Gaining Stocks

SBAC Vol: 6,563,665
INTC Vol: 116,894,024
CCI Vol: 6,078,125
DASH Vol: 5,051,322
GLW Vol: 11,572,082

Top Losing Stocks

ENPH Vol: 6,441,768
TSLA Vol: 82,993,122
GE Vol: 5,322,694
LKQ
LKQ Vol: 4,320,256
SWK Vol: 2,144,540