Skip to content
Market Spectator

Market Spectator

Primary Menu
  • Business
  • Domestic
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • Top News
  • Newsletters
Live
  • Home
  • 2024
  • March
  • 8
  • Costco Wholesale misses revenue estimates on weak discretionary spending
  • Business

Costco Wholesale misses revenue estimates on weak discretionary spending

Market Spectator March 8, 2024 2 minutes read
FILE PHOTO: A woman exits a Costco Wholesale retail club

FILE PHOTO: A woman exits a Costco Wholesale retail club in Austin

By Aatrayee Chatterjee

(Reuters) -Costco Wholesale fell short of Wall Street estimates for quarterly sales on Thursday due to tepid demand for higher margin goods, pulling its shares down 5% in extended trading.

With elevated day-to-day costs hammering household budgets, customers have kept a tight lid on their spending, particularly for big-ticket non-essential purchases such as home furnishings, sporting goods and garden supplies.

In January, U.S. retail sales fell by the most in 10 months with decreases in sales of electronics and appliances as well as clothing, health and personal care products.

However, demand for Costco’s consumables and groceries held steady and helped the company’s comparable sales, excluding the impact of fuel and currency fluctuations, jump 5.8% in the second quarter.

“The same store sales actually came out better than the street expected, which again was weird because you kind of knew what the number was heading into this year,” Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman said.

Total sales were up 6% at $58.44 billion but missed LSEG estimates of $59.16 billion.

The company said that net sales were negatively impacted by a shift in the fiscal calendar and gasoline price deflation.

However, Costco’s e-commerce sales surged 18.4% in the quarter, driven by strong demand for gold and silver bullions, appliances and gift cards. The company now offers online sales of gold bars and more recently 25-count tubes of 1 ounce Canada Maple Leaf Silver coins, exclusively for members.

Costco sold $100 million in one-ounce gold bars last quarter.

These precious metals are considered a hedge against inflation and a safe-haven investment, especially in anticipation of potential U.S. Federal Reserve rate cuts.

Meanwhile, gold prices reached an all-time high of $2,164.09 on Thursday and spot silver prices have also been on the rise over the past year.

The company’s profit of $3.92 per share topped estimates of $3.62 on easing freight and commodity costs.

(Reporting by Aatrayee Chatterjee and Siddharth Cavale in New York; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta, Krishna Chandra Eluri and Alan Barona)

tagreuters.com2024binary_LYNXNPEK260V7-VIEWIMAGE

tagreuters.com2024binary_LYNXNPEK2700U-VIEWIMAGE

About the Author

Market Spectator

Administrator

View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: Wall Street rallies, S&P 500 posts record closing high
Next: US House to vote next week on TikTok crackdown bill

Related Stories

75962f66-78bc-409a-bdd2-0011e20d52ec
  • Business

Nvidia Just Printed $81.6 Billion and the Stock Went Down. Here’s What the Tape Is Really Telling You.

Market Spectator May 29, 2026
a5c94683-cbfe-41aa-936a-afe53ef20b1d
  • Business

The Power Grid Is Cracking Under the Weight of AI. One Stock Is the Cleanest Way to Play It.

Market Spectator May 29, 2026
1519e6f5-7e47-466b-84d0-c1cb63b5c176
  • Business

Rigetti Computing (RGTI): The Quantum Stock the Government Just Bet $100 Million On

Market Spectator May 29, 2026

Live Market Pulse

The charting technology is provided by TradingView. Learn how to use theTradingView Stock Screener.

Categories

  • Business
  • Domestic
  • Economy
  • Money
  • Politics
  • Top News
  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • LLY and the GLP-1 Franchise: What the Options Market Knows That the Headlines Don’t
  • Palantir Is Not an AI Hype Story Anymore
  • Nvidia Just Printed $81.6 Billion and the Stock Went Down. Here’s What the Tape Is Really Telling You.
  • The Power Grid Is Cracking Under the Weight of AI. One Stock Is the Cleanest Way to Play It.
  • XLE and the Hormuz Premium: The Energy Sector’s Options Market Is Pricing a Regime Change

You may have missed

b7313fbf-ebed-483b-8254-22ed5e315625
  • Top News

LLY and the GLP-1 Franchise: What the Options Market Knows That the Headlines Don’t

Market Spectator May 29, 2026
74f93bfb-5a92-4b2f-830a-0a696325170a
  • Top News

Palantir Is Not an AI Hype Story Anymore

Market Spectator May 29, 2026
75962f66-78bc-409a-bdd2-0011e20d52ec
  • Business

Nvidia Just Printed $81.6 Billion and the Stock Went Down. Here’s What the Tape Is Really Telling You.

Market Spectator May 29, 2026
a5c94683-cbfe-41aa-936a-afe53ef20b1d
  • Business

The Power Grid Is Cracking Under the Weight of AI. One Stock Is the Cleanest Way to Play It.

Market Spectator May 29, 2026
  • Home
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
Copyright 2026 © All rights reserved | Market Spectator | marketspectator.com SITE_OK