INTRODUCTION The business outlook for Costco Wholesale Corporation (Costco or “the company”) is bright. Costco as we know and love today started out as Price Club, which was founded by legendary business man Sol Price. In 1975, Price was forced out of a chain of discount department store company he founded called FedMart. Shortly after, he drew up the concept of a "warehouse store" retail model on a napkin. Costco and its subsidiaries began operating in 1983 in Seattle Washington. It engages in the operation of membership warehouse in the U.S., Canada, Puerto Rico, United Kingdom, Mexico, Japan, Australia and Spain. It also has majority-owned subsidiaries in Taiwan and South Korea. The company operates as an international chain of membership warehouses. The product line of Costco to their customers includes food (dry and packaged), sundries (tobacco, beverages, cleaning supplies), hardlines (major appliances, electronics, beauty aids), fresh food, softlines (apparel, home furnishings), and ancillary and other (gas stations, pharmacy, food court). By using a membership format, and strictly controlling the entrances and exits of its warehouses, Costco has lower inventory losses than those of other discount retail operators. The company recorded revenues of $116,199 million in the financial year ended August 2015 (Fiscal Year 2015), an increase of 3.2% over Fiscal Year 2014. The operating profit of the company was $3,624 million in Fiscal Year 2015, an increase of 12.5% over
The strategic objective of Costco is based on the concept of offering members very low prices on a limited selection of nationally branded and selected private label products in a wide range of merchandise categories while producing high sales volumes and rapid inventory turnover. This rapid inventory turnover, when combined with the operating efficiencies achieved by volume purchasing, efficient distribution and reduced handling of merchandise in no-frills, self service warehouse facilities, enables Costco to operate profitably at significantly lower gross margins than traditional wholesalers, discount retailers and supermarkets. (1)
Costco Wholesale Corporation operates an international chain of membership warehouses, which carries quality, brand name
Costco’s former CEO Jim Sinegal designed the Wholesale Club Notion in 1983. Stores were quickly spread throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico. According to Michaud (2012), “By the end of 2008, there were 550 stores in 40 states and 7 countries, with 54 million members” (Para. 3). The company creates a global chain of warehouses that carry value products as per their slogan. Michaud further discussed that “Costco is also one of the largest corporation in the world with 663 stores
What is Costco’s business model? Is the company’s business model appealing? Why or why not?
The US warehouse club and superstore industry includes about 20 companies; however the major competitors that Costco faces are Sam 's Club (owned by Wal-Mart), BJ’s Wholesale Club, and Meijer. The club superstore industry is so competitive that these four companies alone hold over 90 percent of sales. These superstores are able to offer competitive pricing because as large companies they can offer a wide selection of products and have purchasing, distribution, marketing, and financing advantages. Due to low margins, the profitability of these individual superstore companies depends on high volume sales and efficient operations. This is where Costco has been able to succeed and set itself aside from the competitors.
Costco is one of the most profitable retail stores in the United States at the moment. This is in spite of the prevailing tough global economic times and stiff competition from stores such as Wal-Mart and Target. Costco, a members’ wholesale retail store, was founded in 1983 in Washington by Jeffrey Brotman, who serves as the current Chairman of the board of directors and James Sinegal, the current company president. Costco has not been spared by the current global economic conditions. They have affected it in a number of ways that have made the company’s management respond in a manner that is meant to ensure that the business not only survives but grows even stronger. First, Costco has taken strong measures to keep
Costco's mission is to “continually provide our members with quality goods and services at the lowest possible prices (Costco Wholesale Mission Statement - Profits and Prices Revolve Around Ethics, 2013)
In September 1983 Costco's first warehouse opened in Seattle, Washington. At this time, warehouse outlets had long existed, but the concept of a wholesale club was relatively new and promising. Dubbed "buyers' clubs" and begun in 1976, these warehouses were wholesalers that required shoppers to become members and pay an annual membership fee. The membership fee helped reduce already-low overhead, so that items could be sold at an average of 9 percent over cost from the manufacturer. At the time Costco was formed, membership warehouses were primarily a West Coast phenomenon; however, since then, their popularity has spread throughout the United States, across the borders to Canada and Mexico, and beyond to many other countries.
Costco Sale is one of the big box retail companies with the capabilities to render value to the customers and employees in North America and the rest of the world. Costco Wholesale has the potential of solid balance sheet, and with the strength of generating cash flow, in order to carry out its operations, i.e. over $900 million was returned to shareholders in the form of
Costco is among the leading global retailers which provide customers a wide range of merchandise, ranging from small to well-known brands. The company began operations in 1983. Over the years, Costco has been a retailer in low cost membership-only leader, in warehouse club of merchandise. Moreover, Costco does not offer frills warehouse business models as its competitors do. Costco’s major competitors are BJ’s Wholesale Club and Sam Club (Costco, 2010).
According to Deloitte’s 2014 Global Powers of Retailing Report, it identifies the 250 largest retailers around the world based on publicly available data for fiscal 2012 encompassing companies’ fiscal years ended through to June 2013; however, here mainly focuses on the Top 10 retailers’ analysis.
The first of Porter’s Five Forces that impact Costco is the threat of new entrants. The threat of new entrants into the wholesale and membership retail space is low. There are several reasons why the threat of entrants into the market is low. The leading reason why the threat of entry is low is because an emerging company will struggle to have the volume necessary to compete with Costco. Costco is the sixth largest retailer in the U.S. As a major retailer, Costco has the highest discounts on a majority of its
According to Blacktown City Council (2014), Costco Wholesale Corporation operates an international chain of membership warehouses which carry quality brand name merchandise at substantially reduced prices compared to other conventional wholesale or retail outlets. It began its operations in 1983 in Seattle, Washington and later merged with The Price Company in October 1993 operating under the name PriceCostco, had 206 locations generating $16 billion in annual sales (Costco Wholesale, 2015). As of December 2014, the Company operated a chain of 671 warehouses in 43 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico (474 locations), nine Canadian provinces (88 locations), Mexico (34 locations), the United Kingdom (26 locations), Japan (20 locations), Korea (11 locations), Taiwan (10 locations, through a 55%-owned subsidiary), Australia (seven locations) and Spain (one location). The Company’s online business also operates websites in the U.S., Canada, U.K., and Mexico (Costco Annual Report, 2014).
Although Costco seem to have their organization going in the right direction, there are other examples they could have added to the table when it comes to managerial accounting data. They could measure their success by showing reports of their budgets vs their actual results in various categories; this will show if they have any variances. To attract new investors, they could show projected quarterly earnings, and revenue of their products. When a company as large as Costco, they probably get large orders that need to be shipped; it is important to show reports of their back logs so investors will know how efficient their company is. If the back log rises, the company could have increased their sales or have problems with production.
Potential new entrants into the market are a low threat for Costco. We have the advantage of economies of scale and having learned by doing. Our economies of scale come from better management coordination of processes, long term relationships with our suppliers, and enhanced employee performance with low turnover (Pearce et al., p. 100). The cost for a new entrant would be significant given the capital investment required to start up a warehouse business. Any