BJ’s Wholesale Club Holdings (BJ) Margin Slip To 2.6% Tests Bullish Profitability Narrative
BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings Inc BJ | 0.00 |
BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings (BJ) opened Q1 2027 with total revenue of US$5.7b and basic EPS of US$1.11, setting a clear marker for how its warehouse club model is currently performing. Over the past few reported quarters, revenue has moved from US$5.3b in Q1 2026 to US$5.7b in Q1 2027, while quarterly basic EPS has ranged between roughly US$0.96 and US$1.16, providing a consistent read on earnings per share through different trading periods. With trailing 12 month net profit margin at 2.6%, the latest results keep the focus on how efficiently BJ's is turning its club format into margin-supportive earnings.
See our full analysis for BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings.With the headline numbers on the table, the next step is to see how these results line up against the widely held stories about BJ's growth, profitability and risk profile, and where those narratives may need an update.
Margins Ease Back From 2.8% To 2.6%
- Over the last 12 months BJ's earned US$571.3 million of net income on US$22.0b of revenue, which works out to a 2.6% net margin compared with 2.8% a year earlier.
- Consensus narrative talks about higher long term profit potential, yet the slip in margin sits against that story:
- Analysts expect earnings to grow about 6.1% a year and revenue about 5.8% a year, while the latest trailing net margin has eased from 2.8% to 2.6%, so profitability is not moving in the same direction as the longer term earnings growth track record of 6.9% a year.
- That tension, steady growth alongside a slightly softer margin, is what many bulls watch closely because it tests the expectation that membership and digital gains eventually feed into stronger net margins.
Q1 Net Income Of US$142.7m Vs Mixed Recent EPS Trend
- Q1 2027 net income came in at US$142.7 million on US$5.7b of revenue, while basic EPS over the last five quarters has moved in a relatively tight band between about US$0.96 and US$1.16.
- Bears highlight the risk that rising costs and investment needs cap how much of that profit turns into future shareholder value:
- Recent quarters show net income moving between roughly US$122.7 million and US$152.1 million, and bearish analysts point out that higher capital spending, tariff exposure and cost inflation could keep that range from widening meaningfully if BJ's absorbs more costs instead of passing them through.
- They also focus on expectations for comparable club sales growth slowing to the low single digits, which would make it harder for net income to move far above the US$571.3 million trailing level without further pressure on margins.
DCF Fair Value Of US$124.77 Vs US$86.64 Share Price
- The stock trades at US$86.64 compared with a DCF fair value estimate of US$124.77 and a P/E of 19.4x, which sits slightly below peers at 19.9x but above the broader US consumer retailing group at 17.9x.
- What stands out is how the balanced narrative lines this valuation gap up against more moderate growth assumptions:
- Analysts see earnings growing around 6.1% a year and revenue about 5.8% a year, slower than the 11.7% revenue growth forecast for the wider US market, yet the DCF model still places fair value meaningfully above the current share price.
- That mix, moderate growth and a margin that has eased to 2.6%, is why some investors focus on how much confidence they have in BJ's recurring membership income and digital progress to justify a valuation that is higher than the consumer retailing industry average P/E.
Next Steps
To see how these results tie into long-term growth, risks, and valuation, check out the full range of community narratives for BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings on Simply Wall St. Add the company to your watchlist or portfolio so you'll be alerted when the story evolves.
If this mix of risks and rewards feels finely balanced, now is the time to review the data yourself and pressure test both sides of the story using the 2 key rewards and 1 important warning sign.
See What Else Is Out There
BJ's mix of easing net margin, a tight EPS band and concerns about costs has some investors questioning how resilient its earnings profile really is.
If you are concerned about that earnings resilience and want ideas with potentially steadier financial profiles, check out the 66 resilient stocks with low risk scores to compare alternatives side by side.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
