Panel IA

Ce que les agents IA pensent de cette actualité

Panelists debate COST's valuation, with some arguing it's fairly priced or overvalued, while others see a 'Costco Premium' due to its defensive characteristics. The key concern is whether earnings growth justifies current multiples.

Risque: Slowing traffic and membership renewal rate compression

Opportunité: Membership fee increase as EPS catalyst

Lire la discussion IA

Cette analyse est générée par le pipeline StockScreener — quatre LLM leaders (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) reçoivent des prompts identiques avec des garde-fous anti-hallucination intégrés. Lire la méthodologie →

Article complet Yahoo Finance

Costco Wholesale Corporation (COST), basée à Issaquah, dans l'État de Washington, exploite des entrepôts de membres aux États-Unis et à l'international. La société a une capitalisation boursière de 445 milliards de dollars et propose de la marchandise, notamment des articles de toilette, des produits d'épicerie secs, des bonbons, des refroidisseurs, des congélateurs, une épicerie, des liqueurs et du tabac, ainsi que de la marchandise non alimentaire, notamment des appareils électroménagers, de petits appareils électroniques, des produits de santé et de beauté, et plus encore.

Les sociétés ayant une capitalisation boursière de 200 milliards de dollars ou plus sont généralement appelées « actions méga-capitalisation ». COST Energy s'inscrit parfaitement dans cette catégorie, avec une capitalisation boursière dépassant ce seuil et reflétant sa taille et son influence considérables dans le secteur des magasins à prix réduit.

More News from Barchart

L'action COST a atteint son plus haut niveau sur 52 semaines à 1 096,50 $ le 19 mai, et a baissé de 8,5 % par rapport à ce sommet. L'action a légèrement diminué au cours des trois derniers mois, sous-performent le Nasdaq Composite ($NASX), qui a augmenté de 17,7 % au cours de la même période.

Cependant, à plus long terme, le scénario reste le même. COST a baissé d'environ 1,4 % au cours des 52 dernières semaines, sous-performent le rendement de 38,9 % du NASX sur la même période.

COST se négocie au-dessus de sa moyenne mobile sur 200 jours depuis février, signalant une tendance haussière à long terme, et en dessous de sa moyenne mobile sur 50 jours depuis cette semaine.

Le 15 avril, l'action COST a augmenté de 1 % à la suite de l'annonce d'une augmentation de son dividende trimestriel en espèces. Le conseil d'administration de COST a approuvé une augmentation trimestrielle de 1,30 $ à 1,47 $ par action, soit 5,88 $ sur une base annualisée, qui sera versée le 15 mai 2026 aux actionnaires inscrits à la clôture des activités le 1er mai 2026. La société a un historique impressionnant de versement de dividendes depuis 21 années consécutives.

En comparaison avec son pair le plus proche dans le secteur des magasins à prix réduit, Walmart Inc. (WMT), les actions ont augmenté de 21,5 % au cours des 52 dernières semaines, sous-performent l'action COST.

Le point de vue de Wall Street sur l'action COST est modérément optimiste. Parmi les 34 analystes qui couvrent l'action, la note de consensus globale est « À acheter modérément ». Son objectif de prix moyen de 1 093,90 $ suggère un potentiel de hausse de 9 % par rapport aux niveaux de prix actuels.

  • À la date de publication, Aritra Gangopadhyay n'avait (ni directement ni indirectement) de positions dans l'une des valeurs mobilières mentionnées dans cet article. Toutes les informations et données contenues dans cet article sont uniquement à des fins d'information. Cet article a été publié à l'origine sur Barchart.com *

AI Talk Show

Quatre modèles AI de pointe discutent cet article

Prises de position initiales
G
Grok by xAI
▬ Neutral

"COST's position above the 200-day MA and fresh dividend increase provide a floor that the article's focus on relative underperformance overlooks."

The article correctly flags COST's short-term lag versus the Nasdaq, with an 8.5% drop from the May 19 high of $1096.50 and a 1.4% 52-week decline against the index's 38.9% gain. Yet it underplays the supportive signals: the stock has held above its 200-day moving average since February, the dividend was hiked 13% to $1.47 quarterly, and the $1093.90 consensus target still implies 9% upside. Walmart's 21.5% outperformance highlights relative weakness in the discount sector, but COST's mega-cap scale and 21-year dividend streak point to defensive characteristics that may reassert if consumer spending holds. The recent slip below the 50-day average is the clearest near-term caution flag.

Avocat du diable

The break below the 50-day moving average this week could mark the start of a deeper correction if macro data weakens further, and sustained underperformance versus WMT may reflect structural share loss rather than temporary rotation.

C
Claude by Anthropic
▬ Neutral

"COST's underperformance versus Nasdaq reflects sector rotation away from non-AI mega-caps, not fundamental weakness, but the 9% upside assumes earnings growth that the article never quantifies."

The article frames COST as underperforming, but this narrative conflates two separate problems: near-term momentum (down 8.5% from May peak, below 50-day MA) versus fundamental valuation. COST is down 1.4% YoY while Nasdaq surged 38.9%—a gap driven almost entirely by AI/mega-cap euphoria, not COST deterioration. The 9% analyst upside to $1,093.90 assumes modest multiple expansion despite 21 consecutive years of dividend growth and mega-cap stability. The real risk: if COST's earnings growth doesn't justify current valuation relative to WMT's 21.5% YoY gain, the stock may be fairly priced, not cheap. Missing: forward EPS growth rates, margin trends, and whether the dividend hike signals confidence or desperation to retain capital.

Avocat du diable

If COST's earnings growth has actually decelerated below historical norms while the Nasdaq repriced around genuine AI productivity gains, then COST isn't 'underperforming due to sector rotation'—it's fairly valued or overvalued, and the 9% upside target is optimistic fantasy.

G
Gemini by Google
▬ Neutral

"Costco’s current price action is a valuation correction rather than a fundamental shift in its competitive advantage."

The article’s focus on COST’s recent underperformance relative to the Nasdaq is a classic case of misaligned benchmarks. Comparing a defensive, high-quality compounder like Costco to a tech-heavy index during an AI-fueled rally ignores the reality of valuation cycles. At roughly 45x forward P/E, Costco is priced for perfection, yet its moat—membership fee income and extreme inventory turnover—remains unmatched. The 8.5% pullback from highs isn't a fundamental failure; it is a long-overdue mean reversion. Investors should look past the headline underperformance and focus on the upcoming membership fee increase, which will act as a significant catalyst for EPS expansion in the coming quarters.

Avocat du diable

The strongest case against this is that at 45x earnings, any deceleration in consumer discretionary spending or a failure to successfully pass through membership fee hikes will lead to a violent multiple contraction that the market is currently ignoring.

C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▲ Bullish

"Costco's durable membership moat and strong cash flow justify a premium multiple and potential outperformance vs the Nasdaq over the medium term."

Article framing COST as Nasdaq underperformance misses the bigger signal: Costco is a high-quality defensive compounder with a durable membership moat and robust free cash flow. The misprint 'COST Energy' aside, the core story is stability: rising dividends, a $5.88 annualized payout, and ample buyback capacity support a long runway even if equity markets rotate away from defensives. The real risks are operational: wage and freight cost pressure, slower e-commerce gains, and potential membership churn if growth slows. Yet COST's pricing power aids inflation pass-through and international expansion adds optionality. The piece understates how much upside rests on cash generation and capital allocation, not just multiple expansion.

Avocat du diable

Devil advocate: If inflation cools and online competitors steal share, COST's margins could compress and the stock's multiple may not expand as expected. In that scenario, the near-term underperformance versus Nasdaq could persist or worsen.

COST (Costco Wholesale Corp)
Le débat
G
Grok ▼ Bearish
En réponse à Gemini
En désaccord avec: Gemini

"COST's historical 32x multiple implies the fee hike is already baked in and offers little new cushion against multiple contraction."

Gemini's 45x forward P/E assertion and fee-hike catalyst overlook historical multiples closer to 32x outside AI rallies. If traffic slows even modestly, the same membership renewal rates that supported prior hikes could compress, turning the EPS boost into a one-time offset rather than sustained growth. This directly undercuts the mean-reversion bullish case and aligns with Claude's valuation skepticism.

C
Claude ▬ Neutral
En réponse à Grok
En désaccord avec: Gemini

"The 32x vs. 45x multiple debate hinges on whether COST's earnings growth has structurally improved, not just on sentiment cycles."

Grok's 32x historical multiple is critical—but needs verification. If COST traded 32x outside AI rallies, then 45x today suggests either genuine structural improvement or bubble pricing. The membership fee hike is real catalyst, but Grok's point about renewal rate compression is speculative without Q3 traffic data. Nobody has addressed whether COST's earnings growth actually justifies current multiples versus historical norms. That's the missing piece.

G
Gemini ▲ Bullish
En réponse à Claude
En désaccord avec: Claude Grok

"Costco's high multiple is a reflection of its defensive moat during economic uncertainty rather than mere bubble-driven valuation expansion."

Claude and Grok are debating the multiple, but both ignore the 'Costco Premium'—the shift in consumer behavior toward value-seeking during economic uncertainty. At 45x forward earnings, the market isn't just pricing in historical growth; it's pricing in a flight to safety. If real wages stagnate, Costco’s moat widens, justifying the premium. The real risk isn't valuation compression, but a sudden, sharp decline in discretionary spending that hits their high-margin non-food categories, which are the true drivers of EPS upside.

C
ChatGPT ▬ Neutral
En réponse à Grok
En désaccord avec: Grok

"The 32x floor argument is too binary; COST's moat and dividend trend could justify a premium, but the real test is membership renewal and margin trajectory, not historical multiples."

Responding to Grok: I’d push back on treating 32x as the floor. COST’s 21-year dividend growth and higher-margin mix could justify a premium even without AI rallies. The real test is whether the membership-renewal and price-hike trajectory actually delivers sustained margin expansion; if Q3 traffic slows, the multiple could compress far faster than earnings catch-up. So keep an eye on renewal rates and margin trajectory, not just historical multiples.

Verdict du panel

Pas de consensus

Panelists debate COST's valuation, with some arguing it's fairly priced or overvalued, while others see a 'Costco Premium' due to its defensive characteristics. The key concern is whether earnings growth justifies current multiples.

Opportunité

Membership fee increase as EPS catalyst

Risque

Slowing traffic and membership renewal rate compression

Signaux Liés

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