Is Costco Wholesale Stock a Buy Near $985?

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • COST delivered 37% e-commerce growth and 11.6% revenue gains in Q3, yet the stock trades at a demanding 49x trailing earnings near $985.

  • Warsh's first Fed meeting arrives with core inflation above 2.5%, compressing premium multiples and making $830 the more compelling COST entry point.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Costco didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Is Costco Wholesale Stock a Buy Near $985?

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Costco Wholesale (NASDAQ: COST | COST Price Prediction) trades near $985, a price that demands flawless execution into a tightening macro even as the best-in-class compounder narrative remains intact. Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as Fed Chair lands with sticky inflation keeping long yields elevated, and high-multiple stocks have already started bleeding multiple compression into premium consumer staples.

Costco runs a membership-warehouse model that turns fee income into low prices, with Kirkland Signature and Costco Logistics extending the moat. The flywheel produced $275.24B in FY25 revenue and $18.21 in EPS, with $13.34B in operating cash flow.

After climbing 14.74% YTD to $986.68, COST has given back 5.94% over the past month as the market reprices the multiple a slow-and-steady retailer deserves when 10-year yields refuse to budge.

The Flywheel Keeps Spinning Faster Than the Share Price

Q3 FY26 delivered EPS of $4.93 on revenue of $70.53B, an 11.6% YoY jump beating consensus, with digitally-enabled comparable sales up 21.5% and e-commerce traffic up 37%. Membership fee income grew 10.7% to $1.37B, the worldwide renewal rate held at 89.7%, and executive members now drive 75.0% of net sales. Net income jumped 15.2%.

Management plans to reach roughly 940 warehouses by FY26 year-end. Quarterly earnings growth running at 45.5% YoY makes a forward P/E of 44 look less absurd in context. Analyst sentiment broadly agrees, with 22 of 37 analysts rating it Buy or Strong Buy.

A 49 P/E Meets a Fed That Cannot Cut Fast Enough

Costco trades at a trailing P/E of 49, a forward P/E of 44, and 13 times book, with a PEG of 4.8. For a 3% net margin retailer, that pricing assumes years of uninterrupted execution. Vanguard’s 2026 outlook warns core inflation likely stays above 2.5%, leaving the Fed limited scope to cut below a 3.5% neutral rate. Sticky inflation plus elevated long yields compresses premium multiples.

COST trades below its 50-day moving average of $1,004.25 and only modestly above the 200-day at $957.56, with a 52-week high of $1,096.50 already in the rearview.

Great Business, Demanding Entry Price

Nothing in the fundamentals justifies selling a compounder with 82.1M paid memberships and double-digit fee growth. The multiple does not justify chasing the stock into Warsh’s first meeting. A pullback into the low-$900s, or a broader market reset toward $830, would offer real margin of safety. Watch comp sales, membership growth (now running near 4.1%), and any dovish signal from the Fed.

Where the Numbers Leave Costco Today

Costco currently trades at $986.68, up 14.74% YTD versus a 10.03% gain for the S&P 500, but down 5.94% over the past month. The consensus analyst target of $1,082.33 implies roughly 10% upside. Across 37 covering analysts:

  • Strong Buy: 3
  • Buy: 19
  • Hold: 13
  • Sell: 1
  • Strong Sell: 1

Valuation runs hot with EV/EBITDA at 29 and a 0.55% dividend yield, against a market cap of $434.4B.

At $985, Patience Has a Price Tag

At $985, Costco sits in a tension zone. The business fires on every cylinder that matters, yet the entry price assumes the macro cooperates and the multiple holds, both of which look uncertain with Warsh inheriting a sticky inflation problem and the market already punishing high multiples.

The bull case strengthens if Costco pulls back toward $830 on broader multiple compression, or if comps reaccelerate above 10% adjusted while the Fed signals real cuts. The bear case requires a real crack in the 89.7% renewal rate or membership growth, which Q3 did not show. Until one of those breaks, the setup remains in stalemate.

The cost of patience is missing the drift to consensus. The cost of acting is paying 44 times forward earnings for a 3% margin retailer into a tightening cycle. That asymmetry explains why many investors are sitting on their hands at this price.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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