BJ's Wholesale Is Growing, Buying Back Stock, and Still Dirt Cheap

By Thomas Hughes | March 05, 2026, 5:38 PM

BJ’s Wholesale Club logo in warehouse aisle with bulk pallets.

BJ’s Wholesale Club (NYSE: BJ) is a quality buy in 2026 because it is growing, outperforming guidance, has a healthy balance sheet, and offers value relative to competitors.

While it trades in line with the broad market at approximately 22-23x its current-year outlook, competitors like Walmart (NASDAQ: WMT) and Costco (NASDAQ: COST) (from whom it takes share) trade at much higher valuations. There is concern about future execution, and guidance for 2026 was tepid, but neither impacts the company’s quality, and the long-term outlook is robust.

BJ’s competes by offering a range of services and competitive pricing on critical retail items. Among the differentiators are curbside pick-up and the allowance of manufacturer coupons. 

BJ’s Wholesale Has Momentum Coming Into 2026

BJ’s Wholesale Club had a solid quarter in Q4 2025 with revenue growing by 5.6% and outpacing MarketBeat’s consensus estimate. The growth was driven by a 1.6% systemwide comp, a 2.6% ex-fuel comp, new stores, increased membership, and digital services. Membership fees increased by 10.9% due to traffic and mix, with higher tiers seeing improved penetration among new and existing customers. Digital, a pillar of the company’s growth, improved by 31% and more than 50% in the two-year stack as customers lean into the service. 

Margin news is also solid. The company experienced margin pressure from store openings and mix, but navigated the environment well. The net result is a minor contraction in margin, leaving adjusted EBITDA up by 0.7% and net income up by more than 2.5%. Adjusted earnings, the headline and market-moving news, increased by 3.2% on a year-over-year (YOY) basis and outperformed by approximately 400 basis points. 

Guidance is bullish, albeit less than what analysts had hoped. The company forecasts new-store growth and a 2.5% comp at the midpoint, with EPS of $4.50. The $4.50 EPS midpoint implies 3% YOY growth and may be cautious, given trends and the potential for consumer headwinds in early 2026. Not only do labor markets sustain growth, but larger tax return checks are also in play. The IRS estimates returns are 10% to 11% higher on average, a boost for consumers across the spectrum. 

BJ’s Cash Flow Underpins Stock Price Outlook

BJ’s business is profitable, generating ample cash flow sufficient for reinvestments and capital return while improving balance sheet health. Capital return consists entirely of share repurchases, a factor that contributes to the stock's lower valuation relative to peers. However, the buybacks are substantial, having reduced the count by more than 1% on average in Q4 and 2025, and are expected to continue. The company has approximately $750 million left under its current authorization, enough for six to seven quarters at the Q4 buyback pace. 

Balance sheet highlights offer no red flags. The year-end details include increases in cash, current, and total assets, offset by smaller increases in liabilities. Equity improved by 18% and leverage remains low. Debt leverage is present but negligible, and total liabilities are less than 2x equity, leaving BJ's in a nimble financial position able to continue executing its strategy. 

Analysts and Institutions Support BJ’s Wholesale Club Stock Price

Analysts are responding with mixed sentiment, citing the tepid guidance, but the tone is more bullish than not, focusing on Q4 strengths such as membership gains and cash flow.

While no revisions were logged immediately after the release, chatter affirms BJ’s Hold consensus rating and $108 price target. Together, they support this market and a potential rebound, though upside is limited in early 2026. 

Institutional support is likewise present and stronger than that of the analysts. MarketBeat data show institutions own more than 98% of the stock and have accumulated it over recent quarters. Selling activity ramped up in early 2026, but it is offset by buying, with institutional purchases outpacing sales on a dollar basis heading into the release.

In this environment, BJ’s price may struggle to advance and experience volatility, but it is unlikely to move substantially lower. The price floor appears to be $90, aligning with the low end of analysts’ targets. 

The stock price action was mixed following the release. Shares slipped, shedding more than 5% at the open, but the decline triggered a buying spree. Early action reveals support above the critical level and a high potential for this market to regain traction and resume its recovery.

BJ’s Wholesale Club (BJ) stock chart shows pullback to support near EMAs, flagged as buying opportunity.

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