Costco Profits Jump 46% on Sales, Memberships
By wchung | 21 May, 2026
consumers look at wide screen televisions at Costco in Mountain View, Calif. Costco Wholesale Corp.'s profit climbed 46 percent in the fiscal third quarter Thursday, May 27, 2010, as sales and membership revenue both rose.(AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)
Costco Wholesale Corp.‘s profit climbed 46 percent in the fiscal third quarter as sales and membership revenue both rose.
The largest U.S. wholesale club operator said Thursday that it earned $306 million, or 68 cents per share. That’s up from $210 million, or 48 cents per share, a year ago. Revenue rose 12 percent to $17.78 billion.
Thomson Reuters says analysts expected 66 cents per share and $17.63 billion in revenue for the quarter, which ended May 9.
Revenue from sales rose 12 percent to $17.39 billion, and membership revenue increased 20 percent to $395 million.
The Issaquah, Wash., company said it gained $14 million from a partial reversal of a tax charge. A year ago it paid $34 million to settle a lawsuit.
Costco said revenue from sales at stores open at least a year grew 10 percent. Excluding higher gas prices and changes in currency exchange rates, those sales rose 4 percent. Those sales are considered a key indicator of retailer health because they exclude results from stores that have opened or closed over the past year.
At the end of the quarter, Costco ran 568 warehouses. It has locations in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, the United Kingdom, Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and Australia. Costco said it plans to open five more locations by Aug. 29, the end of its fiscal year.
ISSAQUAH, Wash. (AP)
Recent Articles
- Kawasaki Heavy, Nvidia Plan Silicon Valley Robotics Center
- JPMorgan to Hire More AI Staff, Fewer Bankers, Says Dimon
- China's Manus Founders Seek $1 Billion to Undo Meta Takeover
- Trump's Revenge Tour Against Republicans Could Cost the Party in November
- Samsung's Deal with Union Seen As Win for Company Despite Huge Bonuses
- Democratic Senators Raise Alarm over Gulf States Investment in Paramount, Warner Bros Merger
- Kremlin Dismisses Report That China Covertly Trained Russian Soldiers for Ukraine
- Supreme Leader Says Enriched Uranium Must Stay in Iran
- India's 'Cockroach' Group Goes Viral, Spotlights Gen Z Worries
- US to Invest in Quantum Computing Firms in Exchange for Stakes
