Acquired - Costco
Episode Date: August 21, 2023Costco is not only Charlie Munger’s favorite company of all time (plus he’s on the board, natch), it’s an absolutely fascinating study in how seemingly opposite characteristics can comb...ine to create incredible company value. For instance: Costco has the cheapest prices of any major retailer in America — and also the wealthiest customer base. They pay their hourly workers 30% above the industry norm (and give them excellent healthcare + 401k benefits) — and are almost 3x more profitable on labor than Walmart. Speaking of Walmart, Costco stocks 40x fewer SKUs than their Bentonville-based rivals — yet sells an average of 15x more volume of each. And oh yeah, practically all of Costco’s C-Suite started their careers as baggers and checkout clerks! Tune in for a mind-bending exploration of one of the world’s most iconic — and iconically unique — companies.Links:The Science of HittingWarren Buffett’s Costco jokeEpisode sourcesCarve Outs:Tifosi sunglassesDwells “take off everything”Jeremy Giffon on Invest Like the BestDogpatchDavid Lidsky’s great piece on Acquired in Fast CompanySponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I don't think I have ever been more in love with a company and a business model.
What are you, Charlie Munger?
It's just the deeper you dig, the more good things you find.
And usually it's the exact opposite of that.
It's like the opposite of being an early stage venture capitalist. Is it you, is it you, is it you, who got the truth now?
Is it you, is it you, is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight, another story on the way, who got the truth?
Welcome to Season 13, Episode 2 of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
What if I told you that there was one place where you could get all these things under one roof?
A two and a half pound container of cashews, prescription eyeglasses, a tank of gas,
new tires for your car, 96 rolls of toilet paper, a new refrigerator, an outdoor shed,
a 10-carat diamond ring, some fresh prepared sushi, fine wine at a great price, and you could
even grab a hot dog with a soda and a free refill on your way out for just $1.50. Ben, I don't believe
you. Hey, it has been the same price for 40 years now?
47 years.
Yes.
Most of you are very familiar with this Disneyland of consumer value that I'm referring to.
It is Costco.
This company seems very simple on the face of it.
If you sell in bulk, you have the opportunity to offer great deals to your customers.
But what really makes it work are the 50 clever innovations that they've refined over the years that all work together like an orchestra
that's been rehearsing for decades. Nothing about Costco is an accident, from the extra-wide parking
spaces to the whole rotisserie chickens. And if your goal is to offer extremely great value to
your customers on high-quality products
at the lowest possible prices, there are a lot of ways that you could go about doing that.
And today, we will walk through the very specific path of decisions and trade-offs that Costco has
chosen to accomplish just this. So listeners, remember that. Extreme value, high-quality
products, lowest possible prices. And David,
my God, does this method work well. There is a reason Charlie Munker loves this business.
Oh, does he ever. You know the great Warren Buffett joke about Costco, right?
Ooh, no.
Okay, so here it goes. Warren and Charlie are flying on a plane that gets hijacked.
It's kind of macabre. The hijackers each grant one of them one last
wish. And they ask Charlie first. And Charlie says, I would like to give my speech on the
virtues of Costco one more time before I die. And then the hijackers turn to Warren and he says,
shoot me first. It's so great. This actually happened at a Berkshire annual meeting. It's
on YouTube. We'll link to it inkshire annual meeting. It's on YouTube.
We'll link to it in the show notes. Oh, that is awesome. I mean, Charlie Munger,
of course, on the board of Costco and longtime fan of the bottle, as you should be too. So here are some insane stats. Costco has grown revenue right about 10% for over 30 years in a row.
Their revenue per square foot of their warehouses belongs more in a conversation with
Tiffany than Walmart. They seem to have incredible running room ahead of them to expand internationally
and here in North America. And David, here's one that is just for you. Their store brand,
Kirkland Signature, does more revenue alone, not including anything else in the store,
than all of Nike.
I know. It's so great. I think I found that Kirkland Signature as a unified brand,
I think might be the largest brand in the world by revenue.
It's the largest consumer package brand in the world.
Yes, which is a misnomer because like they sell everything.
You know, most other brands only sell like shoes.
But they're $52 billion a year that they sell, which inches by Nike by just about a billion dollars doesn't even include the Kirkland
Signature gas. All right, listeners, if you want to know every single time a new episode drops,
you can sign up for email updates, acquire.fm slash email and two brand new things. We will
be including little hints at what the next episode will be to the email list now.
And two, we'll be including follow-ups from episodes when listeners share things with us
after release, be it little corrections or just additional insights. So sign up
acquired.fm slash email. Come talk about this episode with us at acquired.fm slash slack and
learn from other listeners who may be closer to these topics than even david
and i are if you want more from david and i check out our second show acq2 available in any podcast
player just search acq2 and our next few episodes are about ai with ceos who are leading the way
as the world very rapidly changes in front of us so without further ado this show is not investment
advice david and i may have investments in the companies further ado, this show is not investment advice. David and I may
have investments in the companies we discuss, and this show is for informational and entertainment
purposes only. David Rosenthal, what are the history and facts? So Costco was founded,
as many people know, in Seattle, lovely city of Seattle, in 1983 by retail veterans Jim Senegal and Jeffrey Brotman.
Now, Jeff came from a long line of Seattle retailers. His dad was a retailer. His brother
is a retailer. Jeff was one of the first investors and board members of Starbucks. Super cool.
Yeah. And Jim, well, we'll talk about Jim as we go here. But if you were
around in kind of a shopping age, shall we say, in 1983, you know that the true history of Costco
dates way further back than that to someone that we talked a lot about on our Walmart episode, the legendary Saul Price and his two companies, FedMart and
Price Club. And although Costco, quote unquote, was founded in 1983, the organization that we
know and love today is actually the result of a merger between Costco and its predecessor company,
Price Club. And Price Club is really, of course, the actual result of
Saul's previous company, FedMart, which FedMart itself really came out of FedCo in the 1940s.
In some ways, we sort of have to tell a whole industry history here, but in other ways,
these kind of are all the same company because they're all stacked
learnings from Saul Price and his various brain children over the years to create the Costco that
it is today. Totally. We start, history and facts, in January 1916 in New York City in the Bronx, where one Solomon Saul Price is born. Now, Saul's parents were
Jewish immigrants from Belarus. They'd arrived just a couple years before at Ellis Island as
teenagers. They had absolutely nothing. They spoke no English. They had no money, nothing.
So Saul's parents, like many Jewish immigrants around then in New York,
ended up getting jobs in the garment factories in the Lower East Side. And the conditions in
these factories were like terrible, just absolutely terrible. If you went to school here in the US,
you might remember learning an American history class about the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
in 1911. You remember that? This is like the start of the American history class about the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire in 1911?
You remember that? This is like the start of the American labor movement and the Communist Party
and the Socialist Party emerged as a reaction to this in America because it's a terrible disaster.
Literally, the factory owners had locked the doors to keep the workers in the building so they wouldn't steal. And then a fire breaks out,
146 people are killed, mostly women and young girls. This is terrible. So Saul's parents didn't
work at Triangle, but they worked at other factories just like this. Crazy. And you can't
make this up. Saul, maybe the most influential American retail capitalist in history,
comes out of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory movement and communism and socialism
and everything that's happening in New York and the Jewish community at this time.
Wow. And you say one of the most influential.
I do think he's top two, top three with Sam Walton, of course.
Sam Walton actually wrote in Made in America
that he stole more ideas from Saul than anyone else in his business career. All right, so very
credible argument that he is the most important American retail capitalist. Jim Senegal, of course,
co-founder, CEO of Costco. Jim tells the story that a reporter once asked him if he learned a lot from Saul.
And Jim replied, no, that's inaccurate.
I didn't learn a lot.
I learned everything.
Absolutely everything I know I learned from Saul.
So we found this awesome biography of Saul that's like really rare.
It's out of print.
It was written by his son, Robert.
And if you are a fan of Costco or want to learn about retailing or just all these business practices, you absolutely should try to get your hands on this thing.
It's self-published, too.
It's self-published. I don't think there's anywhere else in the world that lays out
in detail exactly how Costco works and its predecessor companies. It's amazing.
Also super fun,
Blinkist, sponsor of the show, made a summary for us.
Yes. I was texting David before this, listeners, and I was like, I don't think a lot of people are going to be able to get this book if they want it. And Blinkist agreed to order a copy and then
turn it into a Blink. So you can get the Blinkist summary. We'll link to the show notes on how to do
that. But David, the other crazy thing is I think Robert may have signed every copy of this book because he signed yours
and he signed the one that I got. Oh, amazing. That's how rare this thing is.
So back to Saul's growing up years. He says in the book, there's a quote from him,
in the New York Jewish community at the time, there was no such thing as Republicans.
The socialists were the conservatives
and the communists were the radicals. So it really illustrates where Sol's political ideology comes
from. Absolutely. So as a young child, he develops an eye defect that causes his left eye to droop.
He's really self-conscious about this, as you can imagine. But as a result, he channels all of this insecurity
into being like a massive overachiever in school. So he skips two grades in school growing up.
And then in the middle of his high school years, his parents moved the family from New York City
to San Diego, California. Now, San Diego, it's a town of like 150,000 people. This is not the San
Diego we know today. There's no Qualcomm. There's no Illumina. There's only like just the beginnings
of the U.S. Navy and the defense industry there, but it's a small town. When Saul gets out there to San Diego, in a parallel moment to Sam Walton's early life,
Saul meets his future wife while he's in high school.
And it turns out that Saul's future wife's first name is Helen,
just like Sam's wife name is also Helen,
and Sam's wife would be very influential on him,
along with her family.
Same thing with Saul.
So just like Helen Walton, Helen Moskowitz, soon to be Price, comes from one of the wealthiest families in San
Diego. This is literally just like San Diego Walmart. Literally, that's what's about to happen
here just like 10 years before Sam and Walmart. Wow. So Helen's family owns and operates a scrap metal business.
A scrap metal business in the 1930s in San Diego
is about as well positioned as you can possibly be
because San Diego is about to go through
a huge transformation during World War II.
It's going to become the principal port of
the U.S. Navy's Pacific Fleet, which is going to be the main naval operations of World War II.
The city is going to absolutely boom, and it's going to be shipbuilding, it's going to be Navy,
it's going to be metal. David, you and I were just down in San Diego doing our episode with
Doug DeMuro, and I went and stopped by the Midway Museum because we had just done our Lockheed
Martin episode. And you can feel the history dripping off that thing on all the old airplanes and everything.
San Diego has been obviously a huge Navy culture for 75 years now.
Totally.
During and after the war, all these sailors and GIs come through the city.
And then when the war is over and they come back home, wherever they lived in the country
before, they're like, wait, why am I living in Kansas?
I should be living in San Diego.
San Diego is pretty great.
It's really nice there.
So from 150,000 people, when Saul moves there, after the war, San Diego is on a path to becoming today.
It's the eighth largest city in America.
It's larger than Seattle.
It's larger than San Francisco. Oh, I wouldn't have guessed that. Yep. So this is going to become quite the fertile
market, shall we say, for a new retail enterprise in post-war America. But before then, Saul goes
to USC and gets his law degree. They come back to San Diego and he starts practicing as a lawyer.
Now, Saul's timing is just, I mean, you could not script this any better. He becomes a lawyer
right before this boom. When you're a lawyer in a small town, I mean, my parents were lawyers in a
small town growing up. You're a lawyer for your clients, but you're kind of also consigliere.
You're advising on business, real estate, negotiations, divorces, trusts, estates. You're a lawyer for your clients, but you're kind of also consigliere. You're advising on business, real estate, negotiations, divorces, trusts, estates.
You're like super deep with your clients.
So after the war, Saul starts counseling all these entrepreneurs with these new
retail concept startups that are emerging in San Diego.
One of these startups is called the Seven Seas Locker Club, which
ostensibly the premise for this business is literally a club of lockers where Navy sailors
can store their uniforms when they're on leave and wearing their civilian clothes. And then
when they go out to sea, they can store their personal clothes and effects while they're
away on the ships. But actually, that's just a Trojan horse to get all of these consumers into the door.
Oh, it's foot traffic.
And then they offer all kinds of goods and services to them within the locker club.
So there's laundry, there's dry cleaning, there's clothing, there's jewelry, there's
food, there's haircuts.
This might start to sound a little familiar here.
Another client is a jewelry store called Four Star Jewelers.
Now, in addition to operating their own jewelry store, these guys also sell jewelry wholesale to other retailers. And it turns out that there's one account in particular that accounts for like
the vast majority of their outside wholesale business. And it's this odd retail concept
operating out of Los Angeles called Fedco. And you're like, Fedco? What is a Fedco? What is
happening here? It's also like, okay, how are they doing so much volume? You should go check it out and
see what's going on. Yeah, exactly. Well, Fedco, it turns out, was a non-profit membership club.
It was a customer collective, and it was called Fedco because it was only open to federal employees, primarily postal workers.
After the war, about 800 postal workers in the Los Angeles area decided somehow that they wanted to pool their buying power together and their federal employees.
And so they start this club so that they can pool the buying power and get better prices on goods that they can all participate in together.
Well, it turns out there are a lot of federal employees out there, especially in San Diego.
They charged a membership fee.
They charged dues to join.
But unlike Costco today, they didn't really make any money on the memberships.
Remember, they're a non-profit. So the cost was $5 one time for a lifetime Fedco membership.
Yeah, hard to see that working.
But actually, it's not so different, inflation-adjusted, from REI's membership today.
Very clearly, REI is not interested in making money off the membership program.
I pay, what is it, $85 or something once just to grant me sort of a higher affinity to the store, and the money is not really
relevant. That is the perfect analogy. That's exactly what Fedco is. Yep. So as you can imagine,
Fedco becomes quite popular amongst government employees in the LA area. And then not just the LA area,
people start driving from all over Southern California, including San Diego, sometimes up
to like hundreds of miles round trip to do the majority of their shopping at Fedco.
It was time to expand. Yeah. But Fedco's a nonprofit. They're not looking to expand and build this huge
empire. Exactly. So Saul and the jewelry guys, they see what's happening with all of the wholesale
business that they're sending to Fedco up in LA. And they're like, man, we got to find a way to
open a Fedco here in San Diego. And Saul's like, actually, I might have just the location.
It turns out that Helen's family owned a 21,000 square foot warehouse in San Diego's industrial
district that's currently sitting empty. So the three of them go over, they check it out,
and they're like, oh yeah, we could totally recreate Fedco in this building right here in
San Diego. So if Saul were Sam Walton, that would be the end of the story right there. He'd just
be like, great, I'm going to clone Fedco. No, this is how Saul is different than Sam. And I think
probably hearkens back to his upbringing in New York and everything that was happening. He calls up the FedCo board
of directors in LA and he says, hey, we want to partner with you guys. We think that a FedCo would
do great in San Diego. Can we create a joint venture together? We've got the building. We'll
operate the store. Let's go into business together and be partners. Fedco, though,
like you said, they're a nonprofit. They're not interested in expansion. So they turn him down.
And Saul, God bless him, he calls them back and he's like, no, no, no, guys,
we really want to do this. How about this? You can own the whole business. We'll just be a franchise
down in San Diego. You get all the upside. You get all the enterprise value.
Like, we don't care.
We just want to bring this to San Diego.
And they say no again.
Because, you know, it's like a nonprofit board of directors.
Yeah.
On the one hand, you might think Saul Price, not a very savvy business person, just take
the gift and go with it.
On the other hand, ridiculously principled guy.
There's a really funny Saul quote from later
in his life. He's asked about how he feels about essentially being the father of modern American
retailing. And he thinks about it and he sort of laughs and says, you know, maybe I should have
worn a condom. Oh, Saul. Oh, Saul. But it's not that he's a rube. He's a really good businessman. He's just also incredibly principled.
Yep.
And this is going to flow through directly into Costco, as we'll see.
Okay, back to Fedco. So after this second rejection, Saul and the guys are like, I guess we now can go do it ourselves. So in November 1954, they open the store in this warehouse location,
and they had to think about what to call it. And they're like, well, basically, this is a clone of
Fedco, but we can't use that name, and it's kind of a bad name anyway. What if we draft off the
same brand recognition, though, and call it FedMart?
An equally bad name.
An equally bad name that would have historic impact.
So why do you think Walmart is called Walmart?
Why do you think Kmart was called Kmart?
Oh, it was the first mart?
It's because of this.
Yes, literally.
I mean, Sam Walton talks about this in made in america
by the time walmart was starting people knew what fedmarts were they were expanding across the
country and he was like oh great we're gonna draft off the fedmart brand and it was the same thing
with kmart fedmart becomes the first scaled quasi-national discounter. And people are like, what are discounters? Discounters are
Walmart's, Kmart's, Target's. That is the industry that Saul births here.
And so very specifically, we are not talking about what Costco is today as a wholesaler.
FedMart is not big pallets with enormous quantities of things. It is much more like a Walmart. You
want to go grab a can of beans off the shelf,
you grab a can of beans off the shelf.
And importantly, it is both packaged food
and sundries or general merchandise under one roof.
Yes, correct.
And on the one hand, FedMart is obviously a clone of FedCo.
On the other hand, the huge single key difference that makes all the difference,
it's a for-profit company. It's not a non-profit. And so just like all capitalist for-profit
companies, Saul and the Jewelry Guys and FedMart have the impetus to expand.
That makes sense. And so just to put some other fine points around what it is and what it isn't,
it is still only for federal employees, right?
Yes, at this time.
Okay. And it's not a membership club.
Well, so it is still a membership club. You do still have to be a federal employee. You do still have to buy a membership. I think they maybe took the lifetime membership price down to $2, so they undercut Fedco or something like that. But obviously, it's not about the membership. The reason they did this
and the reason that no other discounters had really scaled before, this is crazy. There were
actually laws on the books in the US at the time that manufacturers of goods could set a minimum
selling price for retail. And it was actually illegal for retailers to offer products below
that price to the general public. Whoa. So the term discounters, discounting meant selling below the manufacturer's minimum price. How did you get around this? Well,
Saul kind of stumbles into figuring out that if you are a membership club, you're not open to the
general public. So you can skirt these laws and sell below the manufacturer's minimum price.
Interesting. Huh?
So this is crazy.
And this is why I think there's a strong argument that Saul really is the goat among American
capitalist retailers.
We haven't even gotten to Price Club and wholesaling and Costco yet.
He also invents that later.
First, he invents the discounter, which then Sam Walton, Kresge with Kmart, Dayton with Target copy and becomes the dominant retail form of America.
Two totally separate things.
He invents both of them.
Crazy.
So when Saul and the guys opened the first FedMart in 1954 in San Diego, it is a huge and immediate success. Their sort of wildest dreams expectations are that
they do a million dollars in sales in the first year. The store does $3 million in sales in 1954
in one year. Wow. And why do you get the sense that it worked? It worked because it was already
working. This was a no risk bet. Clearly Fedco had proved the model in LA. They just did the same thing as
a for-profit company. Makes sense. So a year after San Diego, they opened the second FedMart
in Phoenix, Arizona, right off the bat, going multi-state. They want to go big here. It's
another absolute banger. Literally, when they open it, there are lines half a mile long to go get into the parking
lot of the store, like going out in every direction from the store. They take it to Texas,
they go to San Antonio, they go to Houston, they go to Dallas. All of these stores are huge successes.
So at this point, two things happen that are going to prove very fateful both for FedMart and for Costco. One, Saul fully stops
practicing law and goes full-time with FedMart. He becomes the president of FedMart. Two, he hires a
young college student from San Diego City College as a part-time bagger in the San Diego store, one Jim Sinegal. And Jim would end up working for the next 22 years
at FedMart directly for Saul. Eventually, Jim ends up running FedMart's entire distribution
and centralized warehousing operations. Warehouses. You can see the Costco picture coming together here.
Put a pin in that. So Fedmark goes public in 1959. They raised $2 million. They plowed that
money into both expanding the number of stores across the country, but also remember back to
7C's locker clubs, the suite of goods and services that they're offering under the roof,
or in some cases, not under the roof.
This is when they add gasoline to FedMart.
So the Costco gas lines,
like this started with FedMart.
They would intentionally price a few cents lower
than whatever the other gas stations
were charging in the area.
And a few cents at that time was a lot because gas was like 25 cents.
And unlike gas stations, FedMart is making money on consumers shopping in the store as well.
So they can price at cost on the gasoline,
get all the traffic coming to the store, and then monetize through the store.
They add a pharmacy to FedMart, Costco Pharmacy today.
People are religious about it.
So there's a crazy story.
The guy who sets up the pharmacy division for FedMart
starts getting death threats from people in the industry.
He has a rock thrown through his window.
It's literal mafia stuff because they're undercutting the fat margins
in these pharmacy counters so much. That guy's protege, who then takes over the pharmacy division
for FedMart when he retires, that guy goes on to start Costco's pharmacy division and run it.
Amazing. Most importantly for the Costco story here, after they go public fen bar uses part of
this capital to develop their own house brand for some of the popular products that they're selling
on the shelves it's like the fm brand is that right the fm brand yep if you ever see FM branded old photos and stuff of like newspaper articles
referring to FM, Cola, FM, whatever, that's what it is. It's FedMart. And then one more
piece of FedMart playbook, shall we say, that clearly makes its way over. As Saul is running
the company during these first few years, he starts to codify some
retail management philosophies. And he famously sort of canonizes these as FedMart's four
priority order principles. And he teaches every new employee throughout the whole company about
this. Number one, first priority, provide the best possible value to customers. Number two,
second priority, pay good wages to employees and provide good benefits, including health insurance.
This is in the 50s. This is progressive stuff. Number three, maintain honest business practices.
And then number four, the last one, make money for investors. So if you're a Costco nerd out there,
and there are probably many Costco investor nerds listening right now, those all probably sound very
familiar to Costco's priority order values. Right. Not the same, but kind of rhymes. Put a pin in it.
When it comes to Costco, we'll bring those up and go into each of them in depth.
So you might be listening and saying like, yeah, yeah, yeah, that sounds good. But I'm thinking about, you know, I don't know, maybe I go to Walmart
today or I walk into Target and I see some similar things written on the walls there.
Isn't this kind of all the same? If you really mean them, no. There are some very, very clear
trade-offs that Sol is going to make with FedMart that Costco makes today that are
very different from what their competitors do. Like one, do you sell loss leaders in the store?
Loss leaders being when you mark down items below your cost in order to attract people into the
store with sales. If you're those other retailers, yeah, of course, this is like a time-honored tactic in retailing.
Of course, you're going to use this.
Sam Walton bragged about it in Made in America
about we could get this, you know,
incredible number of,
I don't even remember what the thing was,
but build a pyramid of them in the parking lot
and blow them out to get people to come
and participate in the spectacle.
Right.
If you're Saul and Costco today,
you're absolutely not going to do this stuff.
No, they won't sell something unless they can make money on it.
Because the flip side of doing loss leaders is that you got to make up for it somewhere. You
got to mark up other goods in the store to fat margins to make it worth doing the loss leader
for you. Basically, it means you're treating your customers like they're stupid.
Totally. That's exactly my read on this too. I feel like, David, acquired number one tenet,
treat the audience like they're smart. If you're going to ever do loss leaders,
you're sort of violating that tenet and saying like, eh, we're going to get one over on our customers. Totally. This is anathema to Saul. He passes that down to Jim Senecal. It's anathema to Jim.
Okay, so that's one trade-off. Here's another really big one. What do you pay your employees?
So in 2006, Harvard Business Review published a really great piece called The High Cost of Low
Wages, where they very directly compare Costco and Walmart employee salaries
and benefits. Which for listeners, if you want those numbers today, Costco's average hourly wage
is $26 and Walmart's is $19.50. So huge, huge difference if you are going to go get an equivalent
job at one or the other. On top of that, at Costco today, you also are
eligible for a 401k with a match and very, very good healthcare, shockingly good healthcare,
even for hourly workers. So if you're going to go work at one or the other today, you'd be very
lucky to go work at Costco. So obviously, the trade-off of this is for FedMart at the time and straight through to Costco today.
This creates meaningfully higher per-employee labor costs for the company.
Yep, totally.
But what are the benefits?
And this is where we get this beautifully interlinked set of trade-offs that play well together.
So what do you get?
Well, you get low employee turnover.
And when I say low, I mean very low.
After the first year, Costco today has only a 7% attrition rate among their workforce.
This is, wow, this is for hourly labor.
Yes. Typical retail is 20%. So it is a meaningfully lower cost to onboard and train
new employees. You normally have to spend a lot of your money ramping people
to get them up to speed. Costco, Price Club, FedMart doesn't have to do any of that because
they're really rewarding their employees. Employee loyalty also reinforces the idea
that people shouldn't steal. They feel grateful for this job. They're excited to be in it.
The shrinkage or the unaccounted for merchandise at Costco today is astonishingly low. It is
0.15% of sales. That's crazy. So merchandise does not walk out the door. Their strong bias
also is to promote internally. So if you look at Costco today, 36% of U.S. employees have over 10 years of service.
And this is truly unique, I think, about Costco among major American, at least, corporations,
and was true at Price Club and FedMart before it. The senior-senior management,
this is the same story. I mean, Jim started as a grocery bagger in the 50s at FedMart. Craig Jelinek started his career as an hourly employee at FedMart.
This is how long the tenure is of these people and how linked these stories are.
If you look at their executive team at Costco today,
basically all of them have been there for over 25 years.
The only vice presidents at the company who have not
are the digital
e-commerce people that they had to bring in to address some issues. Decades ago. It's crazy.
So what happens? FedMart truly was the first discounter that scaled nationally.
All of these innovations, even though Saul came up with them, as these other companies are scaling, and I think particularly Kmart, they don't really have the large-scale operational out of the Kresge department store chain, which was huge. So they had so much more access to capital, certainly than FedMart and even than Sam Walton and Walmart. Sam had to fight bitterly, last mile by last mile, building out his distribution network to beat Kmart. Sol and FedMart, they don't really have the firepower to compete. So they need capital or they need to sell the business, one or the other.
And it seems like what they kind of did
was accidentally both.
Yeah, in the biography,
Saul comments to his son, Robert,
who had also joined the company,
joined FedMart at this time.
He says, quote,
we're good at creating businesses.
We're not as good at running businesses.
Yeah.
Okay, listeners, now is a great time to tell
you about longtime friend of the show, ServiceNow. Yes, as you know, ServiceNow is the AI platform
for business transformation, and they have some new news to share. ServiceNow is introducing AI
agents. So only the ServiceNow platform puts AI agents to work across every corner of your
business. Yep. And as you know from listening to us all year, ServiceNow is pretty remarkable about
embracing the latest AI developments and building them into products for their customers. AI agents
are the next phase of this. So what are AI agents? AI agents can think, learn, solve problems,
and make decisions autonomously.
They work on behalf of your teams, elevating their productivity and potential. And while
you get incredible productivity enhancements, you also get to stay in full control.
Yep. With ServiceNow, AI agents proactively solve challenges from IT to HR, customer service,
software development, you name it. These agents collaborate, they learn
from each other, and they continuously improve, handling the busy work across your business so
that your teams can actually focus on what truly matters. Ultimately, ServiceNow and Agentech AI
is the way to deploy AI across every corner of your enterprise. They boost productivity for
employees, enrich customer experiences, and make work better for everyone.
Yep. So learn how you can put AI agents to work for your people by clicking the link in the show notes or going to servicenow.com slash AI dash agents.
All right, David. So what happens with FedMart?
So like you say, by the time we get to the end of the 60s, early 70s, Saul's burned out.
He and Robert, they don't want to be running this business at scale.
First, he brings in, quote unquote, professional management
and moves up to chairman of the board.
Second, he starts looking around for a capital partner
to help the business compete on a more level playing field
with the other discounters.
They end up going to Europe.
And this is super important,
both for the drama that happens, but also leading into Price Club and Costco. At the time in the
70s, this new retail concept in Europe was getting going, actually pioneered by the French company
Carrefour, which is still a huge global retailer today. And that concept is the hypermarket.
So what are hypermarkets? Hypermarkets are smashing together everything we were just
talking about with the discounters, the general goods retailing, with a full-scale grocery store
supermarket. So fresh food, everything. This is what almost every Walmart is today,
the super centers. It's grocery and hard goods in one huge, enormous warehouse, you might say.
Which is funny. You would have assumed that the Americans would pioneer that. It's hilarious
that the French did. It was the French of all people. So this concept didn't exist yet. And
it wasn't until the late 80s that Walmart would really embrace it and roll it out across America.
So as Saul and Robert are looking for partners to take FedMart to the next level and going across Europe, they're meeting with all these hypermarket operators.
So they end up getting into bed with one of the German clones run by a retail entrepreneur named Hugo
Mann. The idea was that Mann was going to help Saul and FedMart take this hypermarket concept
and morph the existing FedMart stores into hypermarkets, which Walmart would do to great
success, but like 15 years later. Had this happened, we would be telling a very different story today.
And we might all be shopping at Fedmarts.
Totally.
In practice, what ended up happening is this weird thing where
Sol Price was an innovator and a great merchant, but not a deal guy.
And so it seems like there's two cardinal sins that get committed. One,
not really asking Hugo Mann, why do you want to do this deal? And what is interesting about this
to you? And what do you want to do with the combined company? And then two, selling the
majority of it and treating them like a minority investor. Yeah, Saul is looking for a growth
investor and he ends up getting a buyout. Yeah, one with misaligned interests.
So within a few months of when the deal actually closes, perhaps predictably,
Saul and Hugo get in a huge fight.
At the very first board meeting.
The very first board meeting, they're like yelling at each other,
this is not going well.
Man, fires.
Saul literally fires Saul, I think, and Robert too, and changes the locks on their office doors. Literally boots Saul out of his own company.
It's super ugly. And then the person at FedMart of the remaining executives who they task with,
you think like doing an all hands or the equivalent of, and inform FedMart of the remaining executives who they task with, you think like doing an all
hands or the equivalent of, and inform the rest of the company what's just happened.
You know who that was? No.
Jim Sinegal. No way.
Yes. Wow.
Isn't that hilarious? Oh my gosh.
Oh, that is crazy. And I think what was going on here is Hugo Mann just realized that FedMart
was sitting on a goldmine of real estate and just wanted the real estate portfolio. And what
Sol and Robert wanted was operating capital from the parent company, from Hugo Mann,
to invest more in aggressively opening more FedMart stores.
And pioneering hypermarkets in America.
Yeah, which of course Hugo Mann had no interest in. Yep. So had this not gone down like this,
I think Saul probably would have just retired
as new management took over at FedMart
and all would have been amicable.
He wasn't really interested in continuing his career.
But because of how this went down
with him getting locked out of his office,
he is pissed.
He is now 60 years old at this point, and he is a man on a mission.
Great time to be a founder.
Totally.
Amazing.
I love that.
He's like the Morris Chang of American retail.
Yes.
Morris Chang, of course, being the founder and CEO of TSMC, who was booted out of Texas
Instruments at age 56, I think.
Something like that. Yeah. And then would go on to start TSMC who was booted out of Texas Instruments at age 56, I think. Something like that.
Yeah.
And then would go on to start TSMC.
So Saul and Robert together, they get a lease on an office literally the next day after they're booted out.
And they're like, we're doing it again.
We're back in the saddle.
Let's go.
But they know they're not going to compete directly with FedMart because FedMart is failing at that. They're going to get steamrolled by Walmart and Kmart and Target and
everybody else. By the way, FedMart within five years was like completely dead after this
acquisition. Totally ran into the ground. And Hugo Mann did make a fortune on the real estate,
but yeah, FedMart's dead. Yep. So Saul and Robert are sitting around in their new office brainstorming what's their angle of attack here.
And they keep coming back to one part of the FedMart business that they felt was underappreciated and they didn't really exploit enough while they were at FedMart. And that is the division that Jim Senegal ran,
the centralized warehousing operations. So the two of them are like, you know, if we zoom out,
there really is kind of a different and orthogonal way to think about the FedMart business. You really could say that Jim ran our warehouse
operations kind of like its own business. They were supplying the individual FedMart stores,
which were sort of smaller businesses. And when you look at it that way, almost all of the margin
that we made at the company was at the warehouse level.
The stores themselves were not particularly profitable and pretty hard to compete with the competition out there.
I didn't realize that they thought to sort of slice the margin up into those two almost like places in the value chain. Yeah. So they're like, well, is there a way that we could take Jim's operation,
recreate it, and make that the core business instead? And so the business plan that they
come up with is literally that. Create warehouses for other individual small businesses, other
retailers, and they're envisioning like gas stations,
restaurants, small variety stores, and the like independent chains that they can come and shop
to stock their own shelves at this centralized warehouse that we're going to operate.
So just business owners can be members.
Just business owners. And they're like, man, if we did that,
I think that would be providing a huge service
to these small businesses
because one of their big problems
that we know from operating the FedMart stores
is actually how you manage your inventory,
like physically where you put it.
You know, you need a centralized warehouse
to hold your inventory.
If you're a small gas station, you don't have your own warehouse.
We can be your warehouse.
Right.
And to put a finer point on it, the reason why it's awesome to just run warehouse operations
is because the logistics are simple.
You are taking pallets of stuff and you are moving it to a location in a warehouse.
And then the customer comes and takes a huge amount of it off your hands. You don't really have to turn and make
sure the labels are facing out and you don't have to deal with, oh, little one-off, you know,
we've only sold 16 units, but there's actually 127 units on this thing. So that you just,
everything is nice, easy, big quantities, doesn't require a lot of attention from your staff.
Being in the wholesale business is good if you can get it, but their inclination at this time is,
the only people who would be willing to shop and buy in that way are business owners. This
would never work as a consumer concept. Yep. All of that, totally true, and amazing parts
of the Costco model. There's one piece in particular that really, really makes this a crown jewel. And it's the reason why they were so enamored of what Jim was doing. the manufacturers deliver the product right into your warehouse. You don't need to run trucks.
You don't need to operate other warehouses.
You don't need to move stuff around the country.
Right.
And the business owners just come to you and pick it up right from the warehouse
where it was delivered right from the manufacturer.
Totally.
And because of all this, because this new business, this Costco Price Club, going to be called Price
Club, is providing such a valuable service to the small businesses that are shopping there
in managing all these logistics for them, or I shouldn't say managing because Price Club doesn't
manage it either. The manufacturers do. They're like, we can actually go back to that original Fedco membership idea.
And instead of having it just be like a way to skirt around the law, we can charge real money
for this membership because we're providing real value out of this to the businesses.
Yep.
So once they hit on this business plan, Saul and Robert poach a few people from FedMart and elsewhere, including they hire this super bright young guy from Harvard Business School named Giles Bateman as their CFO.
And then they go get started.
Giles would later go on to become chairman of, do you know this, Ben?
No.
CompUSA.
Really?
A big part of my childhood. And part of the enormous diaspora
of retailers that come out of not only FedMart, but Price Club. Jim Senegal, after, I think he
was probably locked up at FedMart under new management for a while. After that, he would
come over and briefly work at Price Club a couple years later so like the best of the best
are coming through this place so they decide as they're getting started that in order to keep the
operations really tight and realize the maximum benefit ben of everything you were describing
of how these warehouses operate they're only going to stock about 3000 of the highest volume items that they think most other retailers are going
to sell to their customers. So at the time, Walmarts and Kmarts had on the order of about
50,000 SKUs, and even FedMart had probably close to that many at the time. Going all the way down
to 3,000, this is a non-consensus move. Totally. But if you're only selling to businesses and
they have small stores, it's not like we need to stock basically everything under the sun.
It just needs to kind of be sufficient. Right. Super important. Remember,
they are not thinking about consumers just yet. However, when they launch the first store,
when they open the first price club in San Diego, unlike FedMart, it's not an initial gangbuster success.
Turns out it's a lot harder to sell and recruit businesses to come be your customers than it is just putting out a shingle and attracting consumers.
And there's not like a viral word of mouth necessarily among these business owners.
They're not just encountering each other everywhere all the time.
Exactly.
So they're worried after a couple months that this thing might not work.
They might need to shut it down.
And then they have the greatest stroke of luck.
So they're going around San Diego trying to sell memberships to businesses, and they get a meeting with the San Diego City Credit Union. And the credit union management are like, we're a credit union what you're doing here, that might be a really
good benefit that we could offer of like, oh, you can get wholesale prices on goods.
So Giles, the Wunderkin young CFO, he goes over to the credit union, hammers out a deal
whereby any credit union member can qualify for a new quote-unquote group membership plan at Price Club and be allowed
to shop there just at slightly higher prices than the business members. It turns out that this does
two things. One, this unlocks the gusher of consumers into Price Club. Which allows for not
only volume but word of mouth. This is the seeds that are
sown of Costco today doesn't really advertise. And this is the first moment that they realize,
oh my gosh, consumers are going to tell each other about this thing.
Exactly. And it's even better than that. Because not only do consumers tell other consumers,
it turns out that a lot of small business owners are also consumers. So it also
drives small business owner membership. And because the business members get slightly better pricing
on things, all of a sudden, all these consumers are running around being like, oh, hey, I think
my aunt owns a nail salon or something like that. Let me get her to go sign up and get a membership,
and then I can use her card and get better prices. Yep. And David, do you know what I did this week? I suspect that you drove to a Costco.
And do you know what now has a business membership to Costco? Oh, hell yeah. Where's my card?
Actually, I think you need to go in and have your picture taken. I was on a personal one before,
but while I was there, I was like, you know, it would be appropriate this week. So we now have a
business membership. Hey, we are a small business. appropriate this week. So we now have a business membership.
Hey, we are a small business.
That's right.
I love it.
Another fun story.
As this unlocks the viral consumer word of mouth channel, of course, traffic at this first San Diego Price Club store starts growing and growing and growing.
Saul and Robert start getting calls from local hot dog vendors that want to set up carts at the store's exit. If you got traffic, you know, you may as well, uh, you're going to attract hot dog
vendors. That's right. So at first they ignore them. Eventually though, they start getting enough
calls. They're like, huh, maybe we should do something about this. And maybe rather than letting these guys come set up their carts,
what if we do it ourselves? So Saul calls up Hebrew National Hot Dogs and asks them if they
can supply them with hot dogs to sell at the stores. And Hebrew says, not only will we sell you hot dogs to sell? We'll supply the cart too. And thus, the Costco $1.50 hot dog and soda deal is born.
And still, to this day, it's $1.50 47 years later.
There's a decent chance this is the one and only loss leader that Costco sells today.
Yeah, they're a little cagey about what the actual costs are. I do know that they've gone through
many, many iterations in-housing all the operations to try and keep their costs down.
Oh, they actually make the hot dogs now.
Yep.
They also sell 130 million of them per year.
Wow.
That's not all in America, but if it were, that's like a third of America going to Costco
and getting a hot dog every year. Yeah. So there is this interesting question that has now been
answered, which is there's this kind of horrible way of shopping where I need to go buy in bulk
directly from the warehouse. No good retail experience. Are consumers actually going to do that? You know,
this whole thing was intended for business owners, and there's all these benefits that come from
selling to business owners. Again, you don't need a separate retail area and wholesale area.
The logistics are all much easier. You know, you don't have to ever have your own logistics to move
stuff from your warehouse to a different store to sell it. But are consumers going to do this?
And they learn immediately, yes. It's sort of this shocking thing where it's like, whoa,
consumers are willing to just go to a warehouse and buy stuff right off the palette. That's a
pretty unexpected thing that happened. It turns out that there is really one pretty sure thing,
at least in America, probably the whole world,
that if you sell something at lower prices than anywhere else, you're going to sell a lot of it,
no matter what hoops people have to jump through.
Yep. One other fun thing. Do you know what the building that this warehouse was in was previously?
I do, and it's super cool.
It is, listeners, the airplane hangar of the Howard Hughes Aircraft Corporation.
One of the many, I'm sure, that Howard Hughes had.
But we got to cover Howard Hughes at some point on Acquired.
Definitely.
So on the back of this wild success in San Diego, once again, Saul and Price Club quickly expand, just like with FedMart, first to Arizona
and then beyond. This time, though, it's way different than FedMart vis-a-vis competition
and capital dynamics. So whereas FedMart was capital constrained relative to the competitors,
because of the genius aspects of this Price Club model, they are cash flow geysers about net 30. So that means
the pallet gets dropped off and you have 30 days to pay the supplier. But the minute that the pallet
gets dropped off in the warehouse, those goods are for sale. Right. No more internal supply chain,
no more unpacking, no more shelving. It's just available to buy now. So in many, if not close to all cases with Price Club and then with Costco today,
those goods are sold before Price Club has to pay the invoice to the supplier.
It's amazing.
All right, David, I got a bunch of great stuff for you on this one.
So we're going to flash forward a little bit to today,
but I have a huge thank you for the Costco chief financial officer, Richard Galante, spent an entire afternoon with me
walking through a lot of these characteristics that really make Costco work. So I got a bunch
of great tidbits while I was hanging out in their campus outside Seattle. Where was my invite?
I invited you. You could have gotten on a plane. All right. So here's how it all works today. So Costco actually turns their inventory 12.4 times
per year. And just for comparison, Walmart turns their inventory eight times per year. Home Depot
is more like five times per year. So at this number, north of 12 times a year, David, exactly
what you're saying. It means Costco can sell through its inventory faster and more often than every 30 days. To be specific, they're on about a
26, 27-day sale. This is amazing. So with typical payment terms being net 30, it means they literally
have zero dollars tied up in inventory. And in fact, they're able, to your point, to make a few
bucks on the float.
So this is, of course, an average. There are some things that will sell in a week or two.
Other big ticket items might sit for a month or two. Sometimes Costco can even turn things two or three times before they have to pay a supplier for it. So this is called a negative cash conversion
cycle, where vendors effectively finance Costco's inventory for them.
You know what? I'm in. I capitulate. I'm with Charlie on this one. He can come in here and
give the speech 10 times in a row about how great Costco is. I will listen to all of it. I am in
love with this company. So there's a couple interesting components here. There are companies
that can achieve a negative cash conversion cycle,
but the way they do it is by having predatory terms, where they go to their suppliers and say,
I'm not going to pay you for like three or six months. And that is one way to do it.
Costco is using standard payment terms here. Right, 30 days. And so there's two unique things
that enable them to do it. One is this warehouse model, where things are instantly available available for sale, customers come right to the place where they were dropped off. Not quite
anymore, and we'll get to that later, but at Price Club, that's definitely what it was,
and grab stuff right off the pellet. The other thing that makes it all work is, to this day,
Costco has kept their SKU count very low. SKU, S-K-U, being a unique item that a store has for
sale. I think, David, you mentioned before
about $3,000 at Price Club is what they had available for sale. If you look at a Walmart
today, they have something like $100,000 to $150,000 different SKUs that they sell.
Supercenters indeed.
Costco in the last 10 years was around $4,500. And then they sort of looked and said,
can we bring it down and went to $4,000? And today they're sitting at 3,800. So this number is still going down, not up. And if you do the math and you
start thinking, well, geez, if you're not selling a lot of SKUs, but you have a lot of customers
coming through your stores, what does that mean? It means that any given item is going to turn
faster. It's sort of this magical unlock. In addition to the instantly available for sale
in the warehouse thing,
it is the low SKU count
that directly gives you the ability
to turn your inventory over quickly.
It's just so awesome.
I mean, like, if you look at a price club then
and certainly a Costco today,
capital light, quote unquote,
would be the farthest
thing from your mind. You're like, these are massive structures. There must be so much money
that goes into this. Well, yes, that's true. But it's a capital light business model.
It's wild.
It's all being financed for you by your suppliers because of these dynamics.
And of course, today, as Costco opens new warehouses, they can very tightly predict
how they'll perform because they know how all the other ones perform.
And so, sure, there's a lot of upfront money in opening a new store.
But once it happens, you sort of know exactly what it's going to mature to and exactly how
you're ROI positive on all your fixed costs to invest in that new location.
And you have this negative cash conversion cycle with all of your inventory being effectively
free, if not profitable for you while it sits there. Amazing. All right, listeners, our next sponsor
is a new friend of the show, Huntress. Huntress is one of the fastest growing and most loved
cybersecurity companies today. It's purpose built for small to midsize businesses and provides
enterprise grade security with the technology services and expertise needed to protect you. They offer a revolutionary approach to manage
cybersecurity that isn't only about tech, it's about real people providing real defense around
the clock. So how does it work? Well, you probably already know this, but it has become pretty
trivial for an entry-level hacker to buy access and data about
compromised businesses. This means cybercriminal activity towards small and medium businesses is
at an all-time high. So Huntress created a full managed security platform for their customers
to guard from these threats. This includes endpoint detection and response, identity threat
detection and response, security awareness training, and a revolutionary security information and event management product that actually
just got launched.
Essentially, it is the full suite of great software that you need to secure your business,
plus 24-7 monitoring by an elite team of human threat hunters in a security operations center
to stop attacks that really software-only
solutions could sometimes miss. Huntress is democratizing security, particularly cybersecurity,
by taking security techniques that were historically only available to large enterprises
and bringing them to businesses with as few as 10, 100, or 1,000 employees at price points
that make sense for them. In fact, it's pretty wild. There are over
125,000 businesses now using Huntress, and they rave about it from the hilltops. They were voted
by customers in the G2 rankings as the industry leader in endpoint detection and response for the
eighth consecutive season and the industry leader in managed detection and response again this summer. Yep. So if you want cutting-edge cybersecurity solutions backed by a 24-7 team of experts who monitor, investigate, and respond to threats with unmatched precision,
head on over to huntress.com slash acquired or click the link in the show notes.
Our huge thanks to Huntress.
Okay, David, so take us from the first Price Club through to Costco.
So on the back of these eighth wonder of the world like cash flow dynamics that these Price
Club warehouses have, Price Club goes public in 1979, three years after founding. And I say go
public, not in an IPO, not in a direct listing. They don't list anywhere.
They don't raise any money because they don't need any capital.
So what happens is there's so much buying and selling activity among the original shareholders
because this thing has become so valuable that this is the first time I've actually ever heard
of this happening. Price Club crosses the 500 shareholder mark that at the time the SEC
mandated if you had more than 500 separate shareholders of a company, you had to start
filing as a public company. So Price Club's just like, okay, we'll file. We'll be a public company.
They don't list on an exchange. They're just like, sure, we don't need the money.
That's crazy. So they're registered with the SEC, but they're not listed on a...
Yeah, it's traded over the counter.
They're not on the New York Stock Exchange or on the NASDAQ or anything like that.
Wow.
So for those first three years,
I need to know a price club shareholder in order to buy the shares.
Yeah, there probably are some market-making systems.
I think this is what the over-the-counter market kind of does.
But yeah,
you can't just go trade it on an exchange. Wow. Hilarious. So 1982, they do ultimately
list on NASDAQ probably just to get more liquidity in the trading. Also in 1982,
Saul gets a call from his old buddy, Sam Walton. He wants to come out. He wants to see Saul, wants to have dinner with the two
Helens, get the families together. He wants to shop his competitor like he always does.
Yeah, you know, and he's like, you're doing so great with these price clubs. I love your second
act. I want to come see it in action. And Saul is like, sure, come on out. I think he knows what
Sam is up to, but he doesn't really care. What's he going to stop him from going into a store? Totally. So Sam and Helen come out. They all have a nice dinner in La Jolla.
Saul tells them all about Price Club, how the model works, the cash flow dynamics, everything.
Sam, of course, goes back to Bentonville. And within 12 months, guess what pops up?
Sam's Club. Amazing. And this is really the major difference here between Saul and Sam.
Saul doesn't care. He's like, sure. You know, again, what am I going to do? Stop you?
They stay friends. There's this amazing story that Sam tells in Made in America,
where a few years later, Sam is going around again to Price Club, shopping his competitors
with his tape recorder, making notes about how
they're doing pricing and inventory and stuff. And the security at the store confiscates Sam's
tape recorder. Saul ends up just mailing it right back to Sam and he's like, keep your notes. It's
all good. It's so funny. Right around the same time, another person comes out to San Diego to visit Saul and
Price Club, a guy named Bernie Marcus. And for some listeners, that is going to ring a lot of
bells. Bernie has a story very much like Saul's. He was the president running the Handy Dan
hardware store chain, and he had gotten kicked out by the board
and was pretty salty about it and was looking for a second act. So Saul has him out to San Diego.
He shows him the Price Club warehouse. He gives him the playbook and he says,
look, Bernie, you've got all this hardware expertise. Take the Price Club playbook. Go kick their butt and open the Price Club of hardware stores.
Bernie Marcus, of course, then goes home, turns around, and starts Home Depot.
Which we have heard from listeners 10 times that we need to do the Home Depot story at some point.
I actually did not know Bernie Marcus's name or that he was the founder of Home Depot.
So I think now we have to.
Now we have to.
So this now brings us finally to one more call that Saul gets also in 1982.
There are these years in retailing, 1962 when Walmart and Kmart and Target start,
1982 when all this is happening.
Another Bernie, this time a Seattle retailer named Bernie Brotman
and his son, Jeff, call up Saul. And they say, Saul, this Price Club thing is fantastic.
We're retailers up in the Northwest, up in Seattle. We'd love to open a franchise up here,
a Price Club franchise in Seattle. This is just like the Fedco, FedMart
days. And Saul and the Price Club management team think about it, and they make the very poor
decision to say no. And in a same echo of what happened, gosh, 30 years earlier, Bernie and Jeff
say, okay, we understand. We're going to do it anyway. We're going to clone the Price Club model and start the same thing up in Seattle.
And again, I think Saul is totally fine with this.
Because was Price Club growing aggressively?
They were, but they weren't planning to go to the Northwest.
They were following the old sort of trade routes of the FedMart playbook of Arizona, Texas, Florida, going out across the South and the Midwest.
So what happens next is pretty hilarious. Jeff Brotman cold calls Price Club's head of
merchandising and says, hey, my family and us, we're starting up a Price Club clone up in Seattle.
We actually think the Northwest is a great market for this. Would you be willing to leave Price Club and come up and be my co-founder?
And the head of merchandising is like, well, no, not because I don't think it's a good idea,
but you see, Saul Price is my uncle. He's like, but let me give you the number of somebody else who you really should call.
I think this guy is the right guy for you.
We've worked with him for a long time here at FedMart and Price Club.
He's now left.
He's doing some retail consulting, so he'll probably be willing to talk to you.
His name is Jim Sinegal.
And this is how it all comes together.
Jeff calls Jim, convinces him to come up to Seattle.
He's ready.
He's ready to run his own show, as they say.
So Jim moves up to Seattle.
They start Costco.
And the business plan is really pretty much exactly just Clone Price Club.
And Jim really is Saul's protege.
It's like clone Price Club,
but with a guy at the helm who is built for scale
and absolute focus on the details.
Yep.
And not only was he Saul's protege,
not only is he a tremendous generational talent executor,
he also is the guy who ran the division
that inspired the whole thing.
He really is the perfect guy.
And so listeners, you might be realizing now
when we were saying at the top of the episode,
this really is kind of all one company story.
It really is.
There is a straight line through from Fedco to FedMart, or let's even
just start it at FedMart since it's all the same people through to Costco today.
So Jim moves up to Seattle. He and the Brotmans raise $7.5 million to get going.
Yep. They sell 50% of the company to do that. They recruit eight people immediately,
mostly from FedMart, some from Price Club,
and they're all sort of 40s and 50s. This is like a gang of 10, 12 people who have all worked
together before, industry veterans, have shorthand, and they are just like, we've got the money,
okay, go. We know exactly what to do. I mean, literally, it's like the TSMC story.
Or like the Zoom story. It's like Eric Yuan finding 40 people who knew exactly how to build Zoom and then just doing it.
Yep. So great.
So within a couple months, they opened the first Costco warehouse in Seattle.
Then a few months later, they opened the second in Portland.
Of course, both of them take off immediately.
Then they go to Utah, to Northern California, to British Columbia.
And this is where you can see that what Saul said about being really great creatively in business at the prices and price club, but not great at execution. Why was price club not in Northern
California, given that they started in Southern California? These are the kind of mistakes that they made. So this new
Costco under Jim hits a billion dollars in revenue in less than three years after getting started.
This is in the 80s! And three billion in less than six years, which is the first company ever
to hit that milestone too. It's wild. They go public in, what, two plus years after founding?
Yeah, 1985, they go public.
Crazy. Once this plays out, and of course, Sam's Club is also becoming a juggernaut at this point in time, Price Club is doing fine. Again,
capital is not the competitive vector here, but they're not being as aggressive. They're not expanding as fast as Costco and Sam's
Club. What happens with Price Club is in some ways sort of the same as what happened with FedMart.
You know, as Saul readily admits, he and Robert are great at creative ideas in retail. They're
not so great at scale execution. Now, it's different in that capital is not a competitive vector here.
Back in the FedMart days, FedMart was constrained. The whole reason they went looking for
a capital partner was they needed more capital in order to be able to grow stores and compete
with Walmart and Kmart. These price club warehouses were paying back their capital investment
quite quickly, especially relative
to FedMart because of the cash flow dynamics that we were talking about. So Price Club was
certainly doing fine. It wasn't declining. But Jim and Jeff at Costco and certainly Sam at Walmart
and Sam's Club, they are pedal to the metal, aggressively expanding. And that's not really
Saul and Robert's MO. No. And it does, if you kind of read between the lines in some of this stuff,
it does kind of seem like Costco wasn't poaching people from Price Club, but a lot of really good
people sort of found their way and went and got jobs at Costco. So Costco definitely had at this
point the base of the sort of most aggressive, talented
wholesalers of the West Coast. Yep, totally. And Saul, at this point in his life, he's sort of
proved himself again. He's made his point after his terrible exit out of FedMart. He steps back
from the day-to-day of the business. He hands that over to Robert. He gets really into real estate.
He's not as aggressive as he once was.
So in June 1993,
Costco and Price Club
merged together
to form the United Price Costco.
And as we've talked about,
this really is a reuniting of them.
And at the end of the day,
Price Club was either going to land
with Walmart or with Costco. And Sol Price didn't want it to be Walmart and very, very much wanted to
join forces with Jim Senegal. And so they sort of made that happen. This was the natural
successor for this combined business in Jim Senegal. Now, interestingly, the transaction
really is about as close to a merger of equals as
I think we've ever seen on the show, with the caveat that Jim is clearly going to be the CEO
that's going to run the combined company. At the transaction, 52% of the equity in the combined
company goes to Costco shareholders, 48% to Price Club shareholders. They're about the same size, about 100 stores each at the time of the
transaction. But Costco is growing way faster. So had they just waited a couple of years,
the balance of favor would have been way far in the Costco side of things.
Yeah. And you sort of get the sense that the Costco folks were being very respectful of the Price Club folks
because I believe it was something like a 30 plus percent premium paid for Price Club stock.
And so I think it was everyone sort of looking at each other and Costco sort of knowing that
they could really buy Price Club for a much smaller relative percentage in the future.
But why don't we just do this today? I know it's a good deal for Price Club, folks. And let's just say pseudo merger of
equals. Let's call it and let's be one team from now on. Yep. And there was a forcing function to
this. It wasn't just that Jim had a soft spot for his mentor, Sol, and for Price Club. Sam's Club
and Walmart was aggressively expanding
at this point in time. And so if they had waited too much longer, Sam's Club would have just gotten
huge and potentially run away with the market. So after the merger happens, even the newly combined
Price Costco is still only a hair bigger than Sam's Club in terms of number of stores and revenue.
So they kind of needed to do it pretty quickly
or Sam's was going to run away with it.
Fascinating.
Which is so funny because it's a much less disciplined business.
Every bit of DNA in Costco and Price Club
is just so unbelievably disciplined
and an admirable way to run a business. And Sam's Club strikes me as
a bunch of cowboys who are changing strategies all the time. Well, you know, it's a second
business line under Walmart, of which the main Walmart super center business line is one of,
if not the greatest retail business of all time. It's certainly the biggest still to this day. Yep. Saul, kind of
amazingly, lives to be 93 years old. He passes away in 2009. After the merger, he really devotes
the rest of his life, the next 15 plus years, to philanthropy and politics. So he does a ton of
charitable development in San Diego. He gives back to
USC. USC's public policy school is the Price School of Public Policy because he also becomes
super involved in democratic politics. And actually when Obama is running for president
in his first campaign in 2008, he comes through San Diego and meets with Saul Price, 92-year-old
Saul Price. That's how influential he is, how much money he's giving to the Democratic Party in this kind of last chapter of his life.
Do you know who speaks at the 2012 DNC when Obama is getting reelected?
I do. Jim Senegal.
Yep. So they really are, when I say ideologically similar or the natural successor or almost like another son of Sol Price, Jim
Senegal and Sol Price really are of one mind in many ways. Except Jim is a way better executor.
All right, so let's talk about the execution of this business a little bit. And there's some
concepts that I think we've talked about at a high level, but we haven't really drilled into
why they work so well. And honestly, I have like 10 or 12 of these, David. So we're going to talk about two
important ones now, and then we'll get into more as we sort of make our way to modern day a little
bit. Yeah, let's do it. So one that we haven't talked about is the economics of membership.
And there's the obvious ones that everyone sort of realizes. Today, the base level
membership is $60. And as a consumer, I assume I'm getting some kind of good deal by paying $60.
And that even before learning too much about Costco, I'm aware that that $60 is something
I'm paying up front to get the benefit of some low prices later. But let's analyze some of the
second order effects of membership, which I think But let's analyze some of the second-order effects of membership,
which I think are potentially even more interesting than the obvious ones.
There's a lot of psychology happening here.
Yes. The first one is that it actually selects for wealthy customers.
Yes! This is amazing.
As does buying in bulk. So the items that you're buying are literally cheaper per unit,
so you're saving
money, but you need to buy a lot of it upfront, just like you need to pay a membership fee upfront,
which means that they tend to get members who are not sensitive to cash flow, and they also tend to
get members who have space to store stuff at home. And so I looked into some of the data on this to
try and put some numbers to it. There was an independent research firm that found that the typical Costco consumer makes about $125,000 a
year in household income and has a four-year degree. Walmart, by comparison, has a median
income of about $80,000. And keep in mind, the median U.S. income is $71,000. So Costco shoppers
have a 70% higher income than the U.S. median.
Yeah, this is one of the most surprising things about Costco. They have the lowest prices,
but they have the wealthiest consumers of any major retailer.
Yes, it's totally fascinating. And very smart consumers, people who can kind of look at the
deal and go, actually, I know I'm coming out ahead on this.
Another interesting psychology around this
is when you pay $60 up front,
it encourages you to come and use the membership.
You are more likely to shop
because you've prepaid some of your margin dollars.
I think this is called the endowment effect,
if I remember back to my psychology classes.
Yes, you just sort of assume
that you're
getting some kind of good deal by prepaying for a membership up front. So you want to go maximize
the margin dollars that you're able to get on their discounts, which is totally fascinating.
Another one is that membership further decreases shrinkage. We already talked about the fact that
employee retention is great for making sure people don't steal things. So this membership makes it so members don't want to lose their membership.
You sort of feel like you're part of some sort of club. On top of that, these items are huge.
They're hard to steal. How do you steal a TV? How do you steal a two and a half pound thing of nuts?
And so there's like all these factors. Membership is one of them that really contribute to low shrinkage.
Yes.
Now, you mentioned getting a good deal.
We talked earlier back in the FedMart days about how loss leaders and sales was kind
of an anathema to solve price.
How does that play into this?
Yes, this is super interesting.
So Costco basically wants to provide insane value to consumers.
They want you to get a better deal as a member
than you could possibly get by shopping anywhere else.
And so how do they go about doing this?
They have enforced a strict cap on the margin
that they are willing to make on any product.
So they have decided internally
that they are not allowed to mark up anything
more than 14% above what the suppliers sell it to them for. And I'll tell you, they are tough
but fair with their suppliers in making sure that they get a great price for their members.
And so Costco decides we will only mark up anything a maximum of 14%. They actually do
mark other things up less than that because things like electronics, they actually can only mark up anything a maximum of 14%. They actually do mark other things up less than that
because things like electronics, they actually can only mark up 6, 7, 8%. So maximum 14%. The
only exception to this is Kirkland Signature, where they cheat a little bit and let themselves
go up to 15%. Quite indulgent. So how does this compare? I think that's the interesting thing
here. A common practice at department stores is literally 100%
markup. Someone gets a good for 50 bucks, they sell it for 100 bucks. I mean, even at Walmart,
a discounter, quote unquote, marks up 25%, which is almost twice as much as Costco's margin.
And so Jim Senegal has a great quote on this. He was asked about it, and his response was,
you could raise the price of a bottle of ketchup to $1.03 instead of $1, and no one would know. Raising prices just 3% would The members have to trust that they are going to get the absolute best price on everything
and that Costco isn't going to be playing these games.
Otherwise, they would just go shop at Amazon or Walmart or wherever.
You're exactly right.
The value proposition 40 years ago was you are going to get the very best deal possible on the goods that you're buying here. Extreme value proposition is what they like to say. And the fact that they've just made that true every year for 40 years is something that really does stick in people's psyche. And I totally get the heroin line. I think it's so easy to decide to cheat one year, and then in all the the future years you're going to cheat because you've broken expectations with customers, with shareholders. There's
something kind of magical even in the relationship between Costco and a supplier where a supplier
knows that when Costco is being really tough on them to give the lowest price, Costco is not going
to turn around and then mark it up 50% and make a bunch of money. Costco is going to make the same
margin that they've always made on that good. Totally. It's worth double-clicking on the supplier relationship for a sec.
Costco's relationship with their suppliers is worlds apart from Walmart's relationship with
their suppliers. You go to Bentonville as a supplier and you are getting put through the
gauntlet. It is designed to squeeze you as much as possible. That is not how the
supplier relationships work with Costco. They'll work with their suppliers. They'll understand your
business. They'll come see you. Yep. Okay. I was going to save this for later, but we got to do it
now. The Costco Code of Ethics, as it exists today, largely inspired by the FedMart values from 40, 50 years before, are in order.
Obey the law. Number one, first and foremost, obey the law. And we will save that for a moment. I've
got a fun story of how that came to be. Number two, take care of our members. And listeners,
when you're listening through these, the order is important, the subject of each statement is important, and the phrasing
of each statement is important. So one, obey the law. Two, take care of our members. Three,
take care of our employees. Four, respect our suppliers. And I find it fascinating that they
use the word respect because they have a posture of tough but fair.
And so there's this great anecdote, and I mean, I heard one, but there's 50 examples of this that you can find in various Tegas calls or talking with people who are suppliers to the company, where Costco buyers always ask why when a supplier tries to increase the price.
And that part's not that novel.
I imagine a Walmart buyer also tries to ask why.
The buyers are very deep,
so they actually know the commodity prices
of ingredients from suppliers.
So let's take like a chocolate company, for example,
that sells a chocolate product.
If the chocolate company said,
hey, the chocolate costs more now,
the Costco buyer would say,
well, I know the price of cocoa.
I've been watching the commodities market.
I understand milk, sugar, butter. Why is it more expensive? Just give me feedback on that.
And a lot of the times, it is like a commodity price has gone up, or they use labor in a certain
area that's gone up, or maybe they have a long-dated contract with a supplier of their own
that has an artificially high price for some reason until the contract expires. And so the
Costco buyers will write all
of this down, will keep track of it. And because they manage so few accounts, they actually can
keep track of it. Like each buyer is only really adding three, five, 10, maybe 15 new SKUs a year,
but you manage a very tight set of relationships. So they'll just call the supplier back and say,
hey, last time we talked, you'd mentioned that cocoa prices were high.
I've noticed they've gone down.
Are you lowering the prices
so that we can lower it for our members?
It's like this really amazing side benefit
of having the low SKU count
is that they can be tough but fair with suppliers
and really stick to it.
So awesome.
And because of Costco's gross margins
always being targeted at 11%, capped at 14%,
this means that for every dollar that Costco gets a supplier to reduce the price on something,
again, tough but fair, the customer actually sees most, you know, 89% of the benefit. And so
Costco really does just get to pass, whenever they get a benefit, 89% of that benefit goes to the member. So the way I look at this is some companies always look for ways to make more margin. Costco specifically does the opposite. They look for ways to provide more value to members and retain them for members as longer and get them to get their friends to be members. And they try hard across the board to get lower overhead costs through cleverness and efficiency, not through squeezing or underpaying or anything
like that. So there's a really fun acquired canon, acquired cinematic universe story related to this,
which is the famous, as chronicled by Brad Stone in the Everything Store, coffee date between Jim Senegal and Jeff Bezos in 2001,
which occurs at the Starbucks inside of the Bellevue Barnes & Noble of all places.
That's right.
So perfect.
And at the time, this is 2001, Amazon stock was in the dumps.
They were under pressure from Wall Street. Jeff and the organization were embarking on a campaign of raising prices on Amazon.com
to get profitable.
And they had just started this rolling out.
It was super important.
Jeff has this coffee with Jim.
And Jim explains this philosophy to Jeff.
Jeff comes back to Amazon HQ the next day and is like,
I'm reversing the policy and says exactly what you just said. There are two types of companies
in this world, companies that work hard to charge their customers more and companies that work hard
to charge their customers less. Henceforth, as of today, Amazon is a company that works hard to
charge its customers less. And that is directly from Jim Sinegal. Wow, that's awesome.
So on this point number four of suppliers,
here's some quick math that illustrates
why they do have to be so careful
and why they do wield such an enormously large stick.
So Walmart's revenue today
is about three times Costco in the US.
But since Costco sells so few items,
they are a massive customer for any given supplier.
They always have this super lopsided relationship.
The average revenue per product,
because of the SKU count,
at Costco is about 10 times Walmart.
Wow.
So anytime they're in a negotiation,
I mean, like almost every time,
the person sitting across the table is looking at Costco like, you are my largest customer.
You're like 50% of my business.
I think they try not to have that be the case, but it's very easy for it to become that.
So it is really important that they have it as one of their sort of four main tenets, respect our suppliers.
Now, notoriously missing from these four is the notion of a shareholder.
And Jim Senegal articulates, if we do these four things throughout our organization,
and again, those four things are obey the law, take care of our members, take care of our
employees, respect our suppliers, in that order, then we will achieve our ultimate goal, which is
to reward our shareholders. It's so funny going back to our previous episode
and Rob Strasser's 10 principles at Nike.
And like, on the one hand,
the Nike principles and the Costco principles
are about as far apart as you could imagine.
On the other hand,
Rob Strasser Nike principle number 10
is if we do the right things,
we'll make money damn near automatic.
Right.
And that really is the same thing at Costco.
100%.
So fun story of how these code of ethics came to be.
So in the mid-80s, the Washington State Liquor Control Board
was putting Costco through the ringer when Costco was applying to sell alcohol.
And I think at the time it was just beer and wine.
And basically, the Liquor Control Board was looking for any possible reason to deny them. And I think there might have been some corruption going on. The state had a vested interest in preventing very large retailers from becoming the volume of selling beer and wine. Costco, because they were started with these ethos, came through squeaky clean and actually
got the permit. There was literally nothing that you could sort of drudge up on them to deny them.
And so the company was fortunate to realize at very early days how much it would pay off to be
truly above reproach. No matter how tempting anything was, they had to build a culture that
was completely obsessed with this code of ethics. And you just see it everywhere.
I mean, the wages, the way they treat suppliers, the fierce fixed cap on markups,
the discipline not to raise memberships constantly.
I think it's been like six years between the last two times they raised the membership,
even $5.
It's a ludicrously squeaky clean and long-term oriented mindset.
So back to the story. At the time of the
merger, the combined company was about $16 billion in revenue. That was up from Costco alone was $3
billion in 1989. So by the merger in 93, Costco and Price Club are each about $8 billion in revenue
and then $16 together. So fast So fast growing, impressive scale already.
And stores more concentrated on the West Coast, but around America by this point?
Yeah, a combined 200 stores. So pretty large footprint. They're in Canada, they're in Mexico,
they've already started international expansion, which then is going to become
huge throughout the 2000s, as we'll see for Costco. But right around the time of the merger, Costco takes a pretty important step that unlocks a huge part of the next chapter for the company.
And that is the creation of the famous Kirkland Signature house brand. And there's a fun story
around this. When they were talking about creating their house brand, the company's
corporate headquarters was in Kirkland, Washington, right near Bellevue, right across the lake from Seattle.
And so that's where the Kirkland Signature name came from. I think by the time they actually
launched it, they had relocated to Issaquah, a little farther south. And they were like,
we can't call this Issaquah Signature. No, Kirkland Signature is good.
But it was tied in with international expansion
because they needed a brand name and a trademark that they could clear across all the countries
that they were operating in and planning to operate in. And so Kirkland Signature,
that works in Japan, that works in Korea, that works in Taiwan.
It sounds so generic. I didn't even put it together when I first moved to Seattle 12 years ago that the Kirkland over there was of Kirkland Signature, because Kirkland kind of just meant nothing to me. It meant, you know, what's the Whole Foods version, the 365?
Yeah. something, and that is a certain level of quality. Nobody is attesting that this Kirkland Signature
sweatshirt is a Lululemon sweatshirt that has fancy materials and the most cutting-edge technology in
it, but it is of a certain bar of quality that is sufficient for Costco members. And that is sort of
the ethos that Costco has around Kirkland Signature, that we're only going to put something out there if we feel that we can create value for you, that it's going to be a lower price than what you could get otherwise.
Or the flip side of that, that we can make a better product than you could get from any of these branded products that we were either previously stocking or evaluating stocking. And maybe the most obviously and perhaps most famously where
this comes to bear is in wine and liquor sales. The Kirkland Signature wine, you know, you'll get
people who are wine snobs that'll drink Kirkland Signature wine. They're like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
it's Costco, but like this is actually good stuff. And tequila and vodka, it's the same thing.
Oh, and especially for these things that are very clearly difficult to make and vodka it's the same thing oh and especially for these things that
are very clearly difficult to make and therefore it's made by one of a few people like i've made
by a real winemaker or like the batteries definitely made by a company that makes other
batteries it's not like they're low quality batteries so i do think much like their 11
target gross margin on everything costco looks at their house brand as an opportunity to provide value to members,
not an opportunity to capture more margin for themselves.
Yep.
Now, they also have a pretty unique opportunity, they realize, with their house brand.
Because of the very small number of SKUs that they're putting in the warehouse,
there's much less competition on
the shelves for any given product category for the house brand. So like, yeah, you mentioned,
you know, Whole Foods has the 365 house brand, Walmart has their house brand, you know, blah,
blah, blah. All these big retailers do. Safeway certainly does. But in a standard retail environment,
the house brand is going to be one of like five or six or ten
different brands of a given product category on the shelves. At Costco, it's one of two, three.
Or one of one. I mean, if you go buy the Mixed Nuts, the Mixed Nuts are Kirkland Signature Mixed
Nuts. The Jumbo Cashews are Kirkland Signature J jumbo cashews. And in part, because the buyers were
evaluating the whole landscape and they determined we can do something better for less. I think the
Costco fancy mixed nuts is the best mixed nut blend. But I think that that was an enterprising
buyer who was being creative and working with suppliers and thought like, I actually think we
can provide a better product for a lower price than what exists on the market. And I don't know, I think there's a lot of scenarios where they have.
Certainly, consumers agree, $52 billion of Kirkland Signature sales were done last year.
That does not include the Kirkland Signature gas. So out of Costco's $230 billion top line,
a little under a quarter of it was Kirkland Signature sales,
and closer to a third if you include the gas. Wow, that's incredible. It's America's largest
consumer package brand. So at the same time, too, as they're spinning up Kirkland Signature in the
kind of mid to late 90s, they also start expanding internationally. So first they go to the UK, then they go to Korea,
to Taiwan, to Japan, ultimately China, which is now a big initiative for them.
What's interesting is I think at the time, I suspect there were very few other Western-style
global or globally aspiring retailers that were entering Asian markets because it's not exactly
obvious that a huge warehouse with bulk packaging would work in cultures like, say, Japan, where
people live in tightly packed, dense urban environments, much smaller houses and apartments
than in America. This is not the land of SUVs and suburbs. Right. But it works
great. Yeah. I mean, at the end of the day, people really like value. High quality products at a
great value is a super compelling value proposition for anyone in the entire world. Totally. We want
to thank our longtime friend of the show, Vanta, the leading trust management platform.
Vanta, of course, automates your security reviews and compliance efforts. So frameworks like SOC2,
ISO 27001, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance and monitoring, Vanta takes care of these otherwise
incredibly time and resource draining efforts for your organization and makes them fast and simple.
Yeah, Vanta is the perfect example of the quote
that we talk about all the time here on Acquired. Jeff Bezos, his idea that a company should only
focus on what actually makes your beer taste better, i.e. spend your time and resources only
on what's actually going to move the needle for your product and your customers and outsource
everything else that doesn't. Every company needs compliance and trust with their vendors and
customers. It plays a major role in enabling revenue because customers and partners demand it,
but yet it adds zero flavor to your actual product. Vanta takes care of all of it for you. No more
spreadsheets, no fragmented tools, no manual reviews to cobble together your security and
compliance requirements. It is one single software pane of glass that connects to all of your
services via APIs and eliminates
countless hours of work for your organization. There are now AI capabilities to make this even
more powerful, and they even integrate with over 300 external tools. Plus, they let customers build
private integrations with their internal systems. And perhaps most importantly, your security
reviews are now real-time instead of static, so you can monitor and share with your customers
and partners to give them added confidence.
So whether you're a startup or a large enterprise,
and your company is ready to automate compliance and streamline security reviews
like Vanta's 7,000 customers around the globe,
and go back to making your beer taste better,
head on over to vanta.com slash acquired and just tell them that Ben and David sent you.
And thanks to friend of the show, Christina, Vanta's CEO,
all Acquired listeners get $1,000 of free credit.
Vanta.com slash acquired.
I want to go back to something
that we've been wading into
in the discussion of Kirkland Signature,
which is why is it okay that at Costco
they can only have 3,800 SKUs?
Like, why are people okay with this deal where
I don't need selection when I shop here? And I think there's a few illustrative examples of the
story from here that get into that. So David, let's talk about low selection and how that's okay.
So Walmart and other retailers operated under the assumption that shoppers require selection. It seems like a reasonable assumption unless you started your life as a B2B wholesaler that then fell backwards into consumer
and then realized it was fine for consumers too. So obviously, if you have selection, it makes the
life of a retailer very difficult in a lot of ways, but it was just assumed that you had to.
But Costco makes the opposite bet. They bet that
you don't need selection as long as you ensure that everything you can buy is high quality.
And that is the crazy thing that has worked. Costco essentially has its entire buying team's
ethos sort of shopping for you. They're pre-selecting the best one or two items in
every category. And consumers, because they do all that work ahead of
time, are basically just okay sacrificing selection entirely and saying, yeah, as long as you give us
good value on great stuff, we're totally okay with that. That's an important unlock. You can't just
have low selection and be like, well, it's all cheap stuff. It has to be high quality in its
category and the best deal on the market in order
for people to be okay with low selection, which drives low SKU count, which drives all the amazing
things we've talked about so far. Yep. It comes back to trust. And part of this too also harkens
back to Saul and the FedMart days. Saul developed this kind of principle back in FedMart that he
called the intelligent loss of
sales. Yes, I was waiting for you to bring this up. Yeah. So this isn't necessarily the number
of brands in terms of the selection out there. This is about product sizes. So today, Costco
has taken this to the extreme of like, you can only buy the two and a half pound jar of nuts.
There's no like eight ounce jar of nuts. Well, you could buy a whole bunch of little packs of afternoon packs of nuts.
Either way, you're walking out with a lot of nuts.
Yes.
But other retailers and everybody back in the FedMart days had all sorts of different sizes
of products. And the idea was that by having different sizes, you would maximize the surface
area of customers in market that
you could reach. Like Saul uses the example in the book of household lubricating oil,
kind of WD-40 type stuff. He's like, we only carried the eight ounce can, even though there
was like a three ounce can out there. We lost some sales from customers that only needed one
or two ounces and thus would only buy a three-ounce can
and they just didn't buy the eight-ounce can. But it was worth it to us to forego that because by
only having the eight-ounce can, we could reduce the number of SKUs that we had and get all these
benefits that you're talking about, Ben. I mean, yes. You and I have been trying to do this without
having a name for it for years. People sponsor acquired seasons. There are lots of other podcasts that let you do all kinds of crazy stuff. And we're just like, look,
we have a SKU. It's called The Season. We would love to work with you on that. And it makes our
lives so much better and we can run our business in a completely different way by having a low SKU
count. Totally. If we didn't do it this way, we would need to have an ad sales team or work with,
you know, an outsourced network or something like that. That would add way more overhead to our business that we don't want. Right. This stuff
is all about the trade-offs you are willing to make and just daisy-chaining them together such
that the benefit of each trade-off plays into the benefit of another trade-off that you are making
in a way that's aligned. Yep. I knew we were going to love Costco. Honestly, it's like maybe my favorite business that we've studied. Let's wait till the end to
talk about that. But there's a few more things along the way that happened in the 90s and 2000s
before we get to today that I think are important to touch on. We've mentioned logistics a few times
and that the low SKU count means that they can meaningfully simplify their logistics.
And to put a point on that, they only have so many suppliers who are
bringing goods to Costco. The fact that they sell in bulk means that they can bring a whole pallet
into a warehouse and consumers just sort of come and pluck it off the pallet. It's wholesale. It's
a wholesale club. But there's something we haven't talked about, which is Costco's distribution
centers. So they use something called a cross-doc system for their distribution centers. Now,
remember I mentioned back in the price club days, it's a little bit more complicated today.
Not all the suppliers just show up to the one store, the one warehouse with all the goods.
They actually do need some system to receive things from suppliers and bring them to stores.
Yeah, back in the Price Club days, there were no distribution centers.
Exactly. But here's how the distribution centers work.
Trucks pull up on one side and unload pallets, and that's where the supplier's trucks are. On the other side of the warehouse, there are Costco trucks. And so what happens is, since they move stuff entirely by the pallet, no partial pallets, no these few things go to this store, these few things go to that store. The supplier trucks unload the pallets. They just get scooted
across the dock to go directly to a Costco warehouse. And then within minutes to hours,
that truck leaves and there's no unwrapping of individual boxes. There's nothing sitting
overnight in the facility. This is so much simpler and it really plays into that cash flow dynamic
where things can be available for sale so fast.
And just to underscore how differentiated the system is,
92% of Costco's merchandise is cross-stocked.
Only 10% of Walmart has cross-stocked merchandise
on a pallet system like this.
And it's not like Walmart hasn't invested
many tens of billions in their distribution
and logistics systems.
Totally. It's just that Costco has made a trade-off that makes it so that
they just have a much simpler operation. And they've got all the downsides that come with
the trade-off, no selection, but they get all the upside that comes from it too.
And so this also plays into this labor thing. You can totally pay your employees more when
you need less people to generate the same amount of sales. You don't have wasted manpower unwrapping items from pallets, no one turning the labels out to
look pretty. The customers do all of this. So it legitimately means they just need less people,
and this is why they generate over $730,000 of revenue per employee. They're just efficient
in aligning their trade-offs. I love it. This is the bricks and mortar retail version of the SaaS business fallacy, which we fall prey to all the time on the show,
which is if you invest in or build or around SaaS companies and SaaS company margins,
you can fall into the trap of thinking, well, why would I ever want to be involved in a business that doesn't have 90% margins but
actually what you should really care about especially as an investor is not your margin
percentage but your absolute margin dollars and so yes Costco has much lower margins than their
competitors but the volume that they drive and the actual dollars end up
being worth it. Yeah, even though Costco is only an 11% gross margin business and only ever will
be an 11% gross margin business, it's still a pretty amazing business to own. Yeah, I mean,
it's, what did you say, $230-plus billion of revenue? And seven and a half billion dollars
of operating income off that.
So again, tiny little sliver margins,
but seven and a half billion dollars
of operating income falling out the bottom
is pretty awesome.
Yep.
Especially seven and a half billion dollars
of highly defensible operating income.
Yeah, seriously.
And as you've been talking about,
because of the way that their inventory is financed, a reasonably capital light business, all things considered. I mean, they're building these warehouses on huge pieces of real estate, you know, with gigantic shelving and all this headcount. And it's an to talk about investing nerds' favorite aspect of the Costco
story, which is that there really are two different businesses here under one roof.
There is the retailer, and then there is the membership business. It's almost like way back,
Saul and Robert sitting in the office after FedMart thinking, you know what? We actually
had two different businesses at FedMart. Costco is also two different businesses.
There is the operations of the retailer, and then there is the membership business.
Right. And psychologically, they're one thing. It's one experience for the customer,
but financially, it's two entirely different things.
Yep.
So a lot of people like to make a lot of hay
about the idea that Costco generates
all their profit on memberships
and that retail is just a breakeven business.
And this has been popular to say
because they run the retail business
at such thin margins.
And memberships are nearly a 100% margin business.
I mean, really, what does it take
to run a membership business?
Yeah. With like a, what, 90% renewal rate? Something crazy high like that.
Talk about a SaaS company. Yeah. But it's not quite true. It is accurate to say that membership
fees represent about 70% of the company's operating income, with the other 30% of the
profit margins coming from retail. It's been a little bit more than 30% in recent years,
but that's sort of the historical split.
Think about it as sort of a 70-30 thing.
It really is staggering that a business
that does $230 billion top line,
70% of the profits can come from the $4 billion of revenue
they generate from memberships.
That tells you how razor thin the margins are on
their retail business, almost to the point where you're like, why do they care about growing sales
at all? All they should care about is increasing retention of members. The split is just significant
enough for the retail business where you're like, okay, yeah, we should care about growing sales in
the retail business. But if it wasn't 70-30, if it was 90-10 or 95-5,
you'd kind of be like,
well, I'm actually not sure why we care about
making a single another sale of toilet paper
because unless it is increasing the likelihood someone retains,
I don't care about it.
And they're not quite there, but they're almost there.
Well, except though, the way that you grow memberships
is you grow retail sales.
Right.
But for the last several years,
they have totally been growing retail sales per member. And if it was like a 95-5 split,
you sort of could make the argument of like, why do they care about growing the retail sales per
member? But at this sort of more 70-30-ish split, there's just enough profit dollars coming from the
retail side of the house where you care about that too. I love it. It's like Amazon and AWS versus Amazon retail.
Yes. In the last 25 years, membership has grown from nearly nothing, if you look at what the
numbers were in the early 90s compared to today, $4.5 billion.
Yeah. I mean, when we were talking about the FedMart days, it was $2 for a lifetime membership.
Crazy. And again, David, this membership business takes almost no investment.
They don't do any advertising.
Right.
To quote our friend Andrew Marks,
I basically think that Costco has decided
to only be a decent return on invested capital retailer,
which allows them to have an insane
return on invested capital membership club business.
It's so true.
Again, to quote Andrew, insanely stable growth on a huge capital light fee stream.
I mean, that sounds like a venture capital management company.
It's pretty wild.
All right.
Speaking of membership, let's talk about the last big innovation piece of the puzzle before
we get to the business today.
And that is the two-tiered Costco membership
system and the executive memberships, which they launch in 1998. Is that right?
Yes, 1998, the executive membership. So what is the executive membership and why are we bothering
to spend time on it? Isn't it just a second higher price membership? It is super illustrative of
management's thinking. So I love this as a
microcosm for all of Costco. So you can spend an extra $60, so total $120 instead of $60. And
what you get for that is 2% cash back on your transactions. Now that 2% cash back is limited,
but it's limited at something crazy. Like you can only get $1,000 back.
A $60 incremental investment for $1,000 back is pretty good.
Right. And if you actually hit that $1,000, it would mean you're spending $50,000 at Costco a
year. Oh, wow. I'm sure there are people that do it. So the break-even point of this $60 is $3,000,
which is not that hard to hit. In fact, it's right around, and I
suspect this is why management priced it that way, it's right around the average household
spend at Costco. So they want to make it basically break even for basically everyone.
Which is so awesome and also different than other retailers. I mean,
now there's all sorts of fancy technology systems to do this, but Costco has always been able to
track customer spend at the individual
level because they're all members. They have accounts for all of them.
A hundred percent. And other people might invent something like this to say, well,
we're going to bet that they won't use it. They won't shop here enough. And we'll get to make
some money on the people who are infrequent shoppers. And we're excited about that. And
we'll basically get the breakage on people who pay for the upgraded membership but don't shop
enough. That's not at all what Costco is doing here. And to illustrate that, here's the insane
part of it. If you do not use it, they will refund it. So great. Is there anything more
Costco than that? It is an amazing value for members. It is such a good value that 55% of
U.S. members now do it. But much like everything else we've talked about with Costco, it is also
amazing for Costco because they get your money at the beginning of the year, further advantaging
their cash flow position. And it gets even better because it makes you more likely to go shop there
now since you get
even better deals with the cashback. You effectively, instead of getting the 14% gross
margin, Costco is now only making a 12% margin on you when you shop there. So as long as you're
spending $3,000 or more, it basically just makes Costco's margin even lower for everything you
purchase. Interestingly, 45% of paid members worldwide are executive members,
but those members represent 73% of sales. So whether by causation or correlation,
executive members just spend more, and estimates are that regular members buy less than one-third
of what executive members do. So it's this fascinating customer segmentation thing where Costco just
gets to know and reward the most frequent shoppers who do the highest volume purchasing.
Executive members, as you would guess, also renew at a higher rate. And so it helps with retention.
On top of that, which they call the triple play membership.
These guys are so folksy. I love it. If you get the Costco-issued Citi Visa card,
you renew at an even higher rate. So they have these layers of letting you opt into loyalty.
And all of this, David, as you mentioned earlier, is on top of a high renewal rate anyway.
93% of members in the U.S. renew every single year. Amazing. And you can really see the fingerprints of this DNA in Amazon
Prime. Obviously, the whole thing is inspired by the Costco membership writ large, but these same
dynamics definitely play out for Prime members at Amazon of order more frequently, much more likely
to renew, access a whole suite of services.
It keeps you in the Amazon ecosystem and it makes sure that you're buying more stuff.
Yep.
Amazon makes money on the stuff, Costco makes money on the membership, but at the end of
the day, it is nice to retain a loyal customer.
To contextualize the 93% member retention, again, that's just all members.
That's not even the executive members or the
credit card owners. Subscriptions to streaming services renew like half of their customers
every year. So consumer subscriptions retaining at 93 plus percent is nuts. That's the monthly
retention of most streaming services. It's crazy. On top of all of this, I'm pretty sure that this has never been
disclosed and I haven't asked anyone about it, but if you sort of read trade publications,
people seem pretty convinced that Costco is making money, which of course they are,
on the deal that they cut with Citi and Visa in order to have the Costco card be the Citi Visa
card. I mean, most of the time when you are processing payments,
you owe two to three percent of each transaction to the issuer of the card. I think the dynamics
are actually the opposite way with Costco, where Costco gets to hold an auction and say,
we have an enormous amount of payment volume with enormously good customers with good credit.
Would you like to do business with us? And who would like to pay us for the
privilege of being the Costco card rails? Yeah, I imagine there's not a lot of defaults in the
Costco customer segment base. There's also some fun history to all this too. So that deal,
which you may know, Ben, used to be with American Express. And then they essentially kind of held
an auction, as you say. I think the
origins of this, though, start all the way back with the original Price Club business plan,
not to offer credit, but specifically not to offer credit. Another one of the big benefits
of moving to this business wholesale model was they could get out of the credit card game that
they had to play at FedMart. When they were only selling to
businesses, when that was the plan, it was like, hey, cash or check, that's it. No credit card
exchange fees that we're going to have to bear. And then when they opened to consumers in the
group model, they kept that. So for a long, long, long time, you couldn't use credit cards at all
in price club Costco's. And that's the importance of doing the hard thing first. By proving that
they could exist and set customer expectations around where only cash and check, it meant that
they never had some scary moment where if credit card companies were putting the screws to them,
they had a bunch of fear around, will customers not shop here? They were just from the very
beginning getting 100% of the dollars rolling in. And so they knew the counterfactual. They were just from the very beginning getting 100% of the dollars rolling in. And so
they knew the counterfactual. They knew customers are going to shop with us no matter what.
Credit card companies, if you want to work with us, you're welcome to, but we do not need to pay
for the privilege because we know that our customers are not going to leave us for a fact.
Yep. You'll be happy to have our business, not the other way around.
It's crazy. Of course, with Costco's margin structure, they literally couldn't.
I mean, speaking of trade-offs,
they literally couldn't ever accept credit.
How, with an 11% gross margin,
are you going to go give three percentage points
of that 11% to a Visa?
Like, it actually would flip the business upside down.
We talked about it a minute ago.
They make, what, $7.5 billion of operating income
on $230 billion of sales.
The credit card companies eat all your profitability if you let them in the door. And so it's a pretty incredible position,
toughing it out and doing the hard thing first, and then being able to sort of flip to the other
side of the table. Anyway, I love that point on the payment processing. I think it's an amazing
playbook that Costco ran over the years, and a necessary one. Every single time Costco does something amazing, they needed to because of the trade-offs that
they chose.
So I think that's the last big piece.
Let's take it to the business today.
Definitely.
So, David, to your point, we talked about very few things between, to be honest, like
the late 80s and today.
And it's because the model was basically cast in
stone. I mean, they added things like gas, they added ancillary services, and you can go get
glasses, and you can go buy diamond rings. And I don't know, maybe some of that was done earlier.
I think a lot of that was from the Fedmark days.
Big yard goods. I bought a shed there. But the story is intentionally boring. It's,
what if you grow at 10% for decades, doing exactly the same
thing, having a well-understood set of trade-offs and a strong culture? Where does it go?
Yeah. And you operate in arguably the second or maybe third biggest market in the world.
Which is global retail.
Right. And you're the third biggest player in the largest market, you know, America,
behind Amazon and Walmart.
So this Acquired episode is different because so much of it is just nerding out over the awesome nuances of Costco's business model. And then this crazy thing happened because it was a bunch of stand-up guys making an intelligent set of trade-offs, really thinking hard, and then a whole bunch of people working hard for a long time.
That's the story. Once Saul got things figured out in the second iteration with Price
Club, really straight line to today. So let's paint the picture today. And then I think what's
interesting to talk about next is, okay, everybody knows how this all works. How is it defensible?
Why does only Costco do Costco? But first, tell us about Costco today.
So I don't think people realize, maybe by this point of the episode they do,
but certainly not before, how big Costco is. It's sort of a sleepy story since it's tucked
away in a Seattle suburb. They don't do a lot of chest pounding. They just are quiet.
And they do $230 billion in revenue. They're the third largest retailer in the U.S. They have 124 million
members worldwide. One third of U.S. shoppers are Costco customers. They have a little over
300,000 employees at 860 stores. We talked about this. They do $750-ish thousand dollars of revenue
per employee. Yeah, that's wild. If I remember from our Walmart episode, Walmart, I think,
has over 2 million employees. I believe Amazon has well over a million. Yeah, so Costco is doing
somewhere between a third and a half the total revenue of Walmart, but they're doing it with,
what, almost an order of magnitude fewer people. Yeah. It's crazy. They have the highest revenue
dollars per square foot of any wholesaler or discount store. Target's about $450
per square foot of revenue. Walmart's about $600. Costco is $1,800 per square foot of revenue.
Wow. Is that a Costco or an Apple store?
And they have a lot of square feet.
Yeah.
And this is up from, let me look at this graph. in 1998, they had $600 a foot, and now they're at $1,800 a foot.
So meaningfully grown it. It's important to point out, you've made the comment about Apple,
Costco's margins are a lot lower than Apple. So they're generating a huge amount of revenue
dollars, not so much on the margin dollars, but as we've been talking about, that's the point.
Yep. The individual warehouses these days, you may have these stats exactly, but I think an average Costco warehouse generates over $200 million in revenue.
And the top ones generate $300-$400 million of revenue for a single store.
Single Costcos could be scaled public companies on their own.
Yeah, $269 million of sales per store on average per year.
Wow. Nuts. So just for fun, let's go north of 1800 just to see who else is out there.
Tiffany is 3000. So kind of within spitting distance, like it's only 2X or it's less than 2X
and they sell diamonds. Well, so does Costco. Yeah, it's true. Apple, of course, is the goat
at $5,500 a square foot with high margins. I mean, Apple is just a nuts business. But it's worth
pointing out Lululemon is approaching Costco level two. They're around $1,600 a foot, but of course,
much smaller stores than Costco. Costco is just unbelievably efficient. We talked earlier
about how that's illustrated in the headcount efficiency, but now we see it in the real estate
efficiency too. Yep. This point on growing revenue per foot is interesting. You know, I mentioned it
went from 600 to 1,800 over the last 25 years because it reminds us to look at an important
similar metric in retail, which is same-store sales. So Costco grew this by 14%
last year. Wow. Same-store sales, 14%, which is how you get to that $269 million of revenue per
store. They are so good at this that they actually publish their stores by cohort year in their
annual report, which almost no other company and certainly no other retailer does. And they clearly illustrate that not only does the average store increase meaningfully over
the previous year in most years, but new stores also inherit a lot of the learnings. So the first
year of a new store is dramatically better than what first years of stores were years ago. And to illustrate this, year one of a store opened last year
was better than year five of a store opened in 2014.
Wow.
It's crazy.
It's also wild that these stores
are still growing at those rates year over year,
given that many Costco stores have been open
for like 30 plus years at this point.
Right? It's crazy. I mean, part of it is the addition of gas and the other big ancillary
items they're selling, but part of it also is just being really good merchants and finding
these little things that members love and find value in and doing little optimizations everywhere.
Yeah. And exactly to that point, you know, one of the sort of famous aspects today of the Costco shopping experience is the treasure hunt nature of it. And this is something that they've learned over time. You know, the original Sol Price, Price Club business plan was just the 3000 core SKUs for businesses and then opening that up to consumers. Along the way, they kind of realized
that, hey, if in addition to the core staples we have, which pretty much don't change, we could
change the brands, we could change the exact details of what they are, but we're always going
to have nuts. We're always going to have chicken, stuff like that. If we have a small number of additional ooh and ah, wow, one-time items,
such that every time as a member you come into the store, there's something new and different
for you to find and buy at a really low price, that would drive repeat traffic and make coming
to Costco more of a novelty, more of an entertainment event. And so today, I think about 25% of their SKUs
are these treasure hunt items. Huh. I did not realize that. I mean,
I know they've sort of learned a bunch of things over the years, like when they brought in fresh
food for the first time, they didn't optimize the place in the store where they put that,
but they still saw a huge spike because it drove repeat. When you have fresh food, people come in,
they want to buy that, they add some other stuff. But they've been very clever in figuring out where to put it
in the store to make sure that you have to walk by a bunch of other stuff to get. I mean, the fresh
food is in the back, right? It's like if you're coming in for fresh food, congratulations, you
get to see all these other cool things that our buyers have managed to find out in the world for
you. And of course, you get some of those too. Yep. And I think for the items, again, the non-staples,
the treasure hunt type
items, they intentionally want to run out so that they're not going to be there next time you come.
Yes. That's a good point. Okay. Analysis time? Analysis. Let's do it. Because we haven't been
analyzing this business yet. Yes. So the first segment that we're going to do in our analysis here is power, which is adapted from Hamilton Helmer's Seven Powers book, which is an amazing framework for business strategy. The question here is, what is it that enables the business to achieve persistent differential returns? Or put another way, how can a business be way more profitable than their closest competitor and do so sustainably? The seven
options are counter-positioning, scale economies, switching costs, network economies, process power,
branding, and cornered resource. There is one here that is so painfully obvious that it has been
observed over and over again over the years, And the original credit goes to investor Nick Sleep. And the power is scale economies. It's Hamilton Helmer's notion
that Costco has the ability to leverage their scale to compete for items that their competitors
can't get, or perhaps get a better price from suppliers than any of their competitors.
Nick Sleep has this phrase that I think is possibly the best way to describe Costco,
scale economies shared with customers. And the flywheel looks like this. Costco has enormous
volume. And what they do with that volume is they go to the supplier and they say,
what is your absolute lowest price where you're still making an honest margin on this,
but you're willing to sell it to us?
And then Costco makes sure of that, and they do their research,
and they come to a price and they say, great.
And then Costco looks at their own business and they say,
how can we have the lowest possible overhead?
What is the smallest amount of dollars we can spend at our
head office, turning the lights on at facilities? What is literally the leanest we could possibly
run and still break even or generate a small profit? That's how they come up with this 11%
target gross margin number. And so what they do then is they mark up the goods, literally the
smallest amount that they can, in order to share the most value with their shoppers,
with their members. And then the cycle repeats. They get more members, they get better deals from
suppliers. And to be honest, this scale economies that they then share with customers, I don't know
how anyone could ever catch them in this moat that they've built from that. Well, because as we were
talking about, for most, if not all of
their suppliers, they are by far the biggest buyer of their goods, even bigger than Walmart,
because they have so many fewer SKUs in the store. Yep. This is so fun. I feel like there's such a
resonance between Costco and Nike, even though on the surface, they're so different. Maybe this is
a Pacific Northwest thing. But I really think
Nike has incredible brand power, but they choose not to use it to increase their margins. They
choose to use it to keep prices low and accessible for customers. And Costco does the exact same
thing here. Costco could definitely make a higher margin than they do now and still charge lower
prices than Walmart, but they choose not to. And instead, they share that benefit back with
customers. And that is an investment in their enterprise value. Costco is choosing to invest
those dollars in making the franchise more durable by getting more customer love. Yep.
It really is a choice in durability, I think.
Yes.
In fact, it's what Jeff Bezos meant
when he said,
your margin is my opportunity.
But Costco just runs the playbook so consistently.
And when you look at their overhead,
the fact that Costco runs at 10, 11% overhead
and Amazon runs closer to like 30% overhead,
Costco has chosen a business
model where they actually can just have lower margins on stuff because they don't need to do
things like ship goods to your home. They need way fewer people. They need way fewer investments
in technology to do crazy robotic sorting at warehouses, picking and packing. The Costco
business model is one where they've just gotten rid of all of that. They say,
we're not even going to play that game. Our goal is to lower our overhead so we can pass along
the most savings to customers. Lower our overhead and lower the prices that we're paying suppliers
so we can pass that on to customers too. This is amazing. So this might be the first example I
think that we've found in the history of the show. I think Costco has incredible counter-positioning power today as a large incumbent in a way that
they did not have when they got started.
Ooh, this is rare.
They probably had some counter-positioning in other ways, but today I think they have
huge counter-positioning versus Amazon and e-commerce. And we should talk as we go here about Costco's e-commerce operations,
but they are famously Spartan, shall we say. To me, the whole point of Costco is you go to the
Costco. And the Costco HQ believes that too. Yeah. It is completely counter-positioned
to Amazon's whole reason for being,
which is convenience.
Certainly, if price is no object,
it is way more convenient
to just click, click, click
in the shopping cart in Amazon
and have it show up at your door.
Yes.
Different set of trade-offs, for sure.
But it is rare that as an incumbent,
you have the counter-positioning power. It's
usually a thing that startups do against incumbents, but Costco is a $230 billion
company that none of the other big companies can copy. I mean, Walmart is trying and still
is not succeeding at it. So as we've been researching this episode, naively in the past,
I always thought, oh yeah, Costco's great, but they
really don't get the internet. Which I think that also is kind of true. Like 15 years ago,
I think they thought the internet was going to be a fad, which is why they missed it at first.
And now they're sort of intentionally missing it. But I will get into it, but they're doing
it in their own way. But I actually do think they underestimated it at first.
Yep. But I think where they've ended up is actually
in a pretty good place and in a better place, I think, than Walmart. And that place being that,
no, no, no, the whole point is we are not an e-commerce company. And the whole point
is you come to the warehouse. And because you come physically to the warehouse and you take
the stuff off the shelves, you're going to be able to get absolutely the
best price versus anywhere else. And Amazon today has really become something else from what Jeff
wanted it to be after his coffee with Jim Sinegal. It's not always the lowest price. Often you are
paying for convenience. Far, far from it. You are very much paying for the convenience of shopping
on Amazon. I think on almost every product these days.
Or the brand.
Very often, I will buy something that's a little bit more expensive on Amazon because
I'm like, well, it's going to be easy to return.
Or, well, I trust this company.
That's a very different premise than the original idea.
Yep.
So yeah, I really think that Costco, amazingly as this huge incumbent, has developed a lot
of counter-positioning power.
Yeah, that's a good point. Switching costs, I guess there's some. I'm not going to go join
BJ's Wholesale Club or Sam's Club when I already have a membership. So to some extent, but I don't
think that's the reason that they win. Network economies, not really. No, I think it's scale
economies. Yeah. Process power, definitely.
I mean, there's a culture at Costco that others have failed to replicate or haven't tried hard enough to replicate.
Yep.
I don't think there's a cornered resource, but branding is an interesting one.
Let's talk about that.
Right.
So recently, a bunch of folks from Costco got to go ring the bell at the NASDAQ, and they're all wearing their Kirkland signature sweatshirts.
And a joke is made about the idea of Kirkland couture, and it's worth footnoting this.
It's not the main point here, but it is weird how Kirkland sort of has a passionate following in a way where it's turning into a real brand when that was not the
intention. The brand identity is that it's the anti-brand. Right. There's a lot about our current
consumerism climate that I think fuels that. Also, quick aside, Costco has never tweeted. The account
has a lot of followers and zero tweets. They're not really a participant in social media, but they have a massive tailwind from all the Costco TikTokers. There's people constantly
sharing videos about, here's this amazing thing I found, or here's how I've structured my day to
work Costco in, or... Here's my haul. Yes, they've benefited enormously from influencers.
Well, and this has always been part of the strategy,
even going back to the FedMart and Price Club days.
Sol and then now Costco doesn't advertise
either at all or like very, very minimally.
But they very intentionally back in the day
tried to get local six o'clock news stories
about like, oh, the lines at Costco.
Oh, this crazy treasure hunt item at Costco. And it always worked. Whenever there was a store opening, news crews would go
nuts. And it's kind of like the Nike athletes wearing the shoes on the cover of Sports
Illustrated sort of thing. That's worth a lot more in earned media than anything you could ever buy.
All right, David, while we're here, we have to tell the hot dog story. So
this comes up literally every time there's any sort of writing or podcast or book or anything about Costco.
Very famously, as David and I talked about, the hot dog and drink combo has been $1.50 for many,
many years. And when Jim Senegal handed over the reins to Craig Jelinek, Craig went to him and
said, you know, hey, we're close on margin here, or maybe we're upside down. Nobody really knows
on the hot dogs. We might need to raise the price. And of course, Jim Senegal looks at him and goes, hey, we're close on margin here, or maybe we're upside down. Nobody really knows.
On the hot dogs, we might need to raise the price. And of course, Jim Senegal looks at him and goes,
if you raise the price of the hot dog and drink combo, I will effing kill you.
So that is why it is still priced the way it is today. And this story has gotten so much airtime.
And it's classic Costco. I'm sure this didn't actually happen. They just kind of made up this story. It might have actually happened. Oh, I mean, Craig has been working in FedMart since the 70s. He would never raise the price of the hot dog. Right. He would
have known. Anyway, back to branding, you know, earned media branding. There's this kind of
interesting thing where it's almost like Nike, where I think they have latent branding power.
And I'm not talking about
Kirkland here. I'm talking about the buyers, like trusting the buyers. Members trust the
pre-selected inventory from Costco. And I don't know where that shows up. It definitionally
doesn't show up in price. Costco will never generate excess margin because of their brand.
But their brand earns them something. I mean, people become
members and trust them, and that leads to something. I assume it leads to volume, it leads to
willingness to buy, which leads to volume, or it leads to retention. So this is the second episode
where it's not branding power under Hamilton's definition, it's latent branding power.
Yep, just like the big one with scale economies here.
Yep. In a lot of ways, I think what Costco is sort of doing is they realize that they have
latent branding power and latent scale economies, and they sort of choose not to recognize short-term
profits from those. And I think it's all this super long-term game where this is why the market
is willing to pay a much higher multiple for Costco than any of their competitors. There are
a lot of ways that if Costco wanted to, they could make more money today than they currently do,
but they've decided not to. And so it's the same result, whether you look at it as,
let's assume that they did take a little bit more margin,
or let's assume that they did raise prices on members, or let's assume that they leaned into
their branding power in some way and actually charged the prices that they've earned. Would
the multiple then be reasonable? Yes, absolutely. Or the other way to look at it is, is this business
just going to be around predictably for a longer period of time than any of their competitors because they're doing all these things?
You get to the same answer, which is it is worth paying a higher multiple of the dollars they're recognizing today for a company that has made these choices.
Totally. I mean, let's just say, I don't think we've talked market cap yet.
Costco does what, $240 billion in revenue today?
Yep. And Walmart does $620 billion.
There you go. Costco obviously trades at a much higher multiple than Walmart. You are exactly
right. I think it's because of this. It's because of the durability. It's because of the membership
model. It's like, you know that that revenue is not going anywhere. And there are profits that
they could take today and they choose not to. Yes. Costco, I think, is pretty uniquely positioned in that they're going to do well,
I think, in any economic climate. Because in a recessionary environment, they're going to do well
because they are the lowest priced retailer of goods out there. In a boom environment, I think they're also going to do well
because of the nature of their customer base. As more people become affluent,
they're going to be more likely to shop at Costco. I think that's exactly right. And you can see it
in the numbers. They do very well in every economic environment. Whereas Walmart is kind
of getting squeezed on both directions, I think. In recessionary times, they probably do well, but not as well as Costco because they don't have the
absolute lowest prices. And then in boom times, I think people migrate out of Walmart into shopping
on Amazon, shopping at Costco. Well, should we move into playbook themes? Let's do it. Awesome.
Well, to start, I want to say a huge thank you to Alex Morris, who writes the investment substack, The Science of Hitting.
He has two pieces that were just excellently written,
analyzing Costco's financials.
And he was also very kind, David.
I spent a lot of his Sunday, last Sunday,
emailing him and asking clarifying questions.
And he shared a bunch of data with me.
It was super helpful.
So thank you, Alex.
We'll put a link to The Science of Hitting in the show notes.
To open this section, I want to say a Jim Senegal quote.
This isn't a tricky business.
We just try to sell high quality merchandise at a lower cost than everybody else.
And I think it's hilariously farcical.
He's both right and so cheeky.
This is a extremely tricky business.
Yeah.
I have heard him say that many times too in my research.
And I occasionally hear him say the second part of the quote that he selectively leaves off.
The second part is, anybody can sell goods for cheap.
The trick is to make money while doing so.
We've talked about a bunch of them on this episode.
It's the 50 little things that they do that all sort of synchronize with each other that makes it work. You don't do one of those,
it falls apart. Oh, I want 10,000 SKUs. Oh, I want to be a leader in e-commerce. Oh, I don't
want a membership fee. Oh, I want to blow out a bunch of merchandise and do a sale. Any of these
trade-offs, you break them, the whole thing breaks. There are so many fun little paradoxical things about this company.
They sell goods at the lowest possible price, but that means that they have a wealthy customer
base.
It always breaks my brain when I keep coming back to this point.
And I think it broke the brain of a lot of name brand companies too who refused to sell
at Costco.
I mean, until like 10 years ago, a lot of brands, they just had this
idea that low prices had too much of a negative signal about their brand. And it took decades for
Costco to prove that they really did care about quality. That was part of their value proposition.
And also, it took decades to prove that they could facilitate a huge amount of volume.
And, you know, they've won over everyone from Apple to Dom Perignon.
Yeah, I think this is a critical playbook theme for them. They've managed to create this sort of
walled garden inside a Costco. And I use that in not the typical walled garden term of being like
consumer unfriendly, you're keeping them in the walled garden. It's exactly the opposite.
Within the garden walls of a Costco warehouse,
whatever price products are doesn't, in consumers' mind, equate to their value or what their price
should be outside of the walls of the garden. 100%. You can go and buy right now $500 on
Southwest Airlines for $450 at Costco. You can literally buy dollars for smaller dollars. And
with an enormous company that a huge swath of the U.S. uses, it's not so obscure a restaurant or
movie theater or something. It's like, here's a thing that you're likely going to spend money on
anyway, and this company has decided to put it in here for a lower price. And that works somehow.
Yeah. And another big piece of this is that for the majority of suppliers, Costco mandates that the item you sell them is a unique SKU
that the shopper can't buy anywhere else.
So there's not even any comparison shopping.
If you're buying a blender, the Costco version will come with,
you know, some extra cups,
or maybe a two-pack of Sonicare's comes with a bunch of extra toothbrush heads.
You know, it's these things that are custom, uniquely made for Costco shoppers.
It is such a walled garden.
David, check this out.
Nike normally refuses to sell at Costco
because of course they do.
They're Nike.
They won't even sell on Amazon.
Except right now, as we talked about on our last episode,
they have a lot of inventory
and they need to discount it to move it through the channel.
Nike can't really discount anywhere.
I guess they have their Nike outlets, but for the next couple of years, and they need to discount it to move it through the channel. Nike can't really discount anywhere.
I guess they have their Nike outlets,
but for the next couple of years,
they're going to be moving a lot of merchandise through Costco because it's Costco.
It's, oh, it's different.
Oh, people pay to get in there.
It's a whole different thing.
This isn't just like, whatever the psychology is,
Nike is actually willing to sell through Costco
until they work through these inventory challenges.
And then I'm sure that they won't do business
with Costco again for a while.
But even Nike, the most brand-conscious company
in the world, plays ball sometimes.
Yep.
You mentioned Apple.
Apple sells through Costco.
You can buy iPads there, buy computers there.
Okay, so there is a thing that we haven't addressed yet,
and that is the conflict between operationally light,
you know, low overhead,
and a tremendous amount
of vertical integration.
And when you're selling
$50 billion of Kirkland,
you have some vertical integration.
You do some things yourselves.
The finest illustration of this
is chickens.
Yes.
I knew you were going to get
to the chickens.
I was just waiting the whole time.
I was like, when is Ben going to talk chickens? I want to do a whole episode on Costco chickens. Yes. I knew you were going to get to the chickens. I was just waiting the whole time. I was like, when is Ben going to talk chickens? I want to do a whole episode on Costco chickens.
We need to have Richard, Costco's CFO, on the show to talk chickens.
I know, right? We should ask him. Okay. So when do they vertically integrate? They will do it
when they can provide enough value to members to make it worth increasing their overhead. And so here's the chickens example.
They sell 500 million chickens a year. Not pounds, chickens.
That's like a US and Canada population worth of chickens a year.
That is exactly right. And don't think about it too much. That's also the thing with the chickens.
130 million of which are rotisserie chickens. So even just the rotisserie chicken
business alone, that's a third of the U.S. eats a rotisserie chicken every year. The rest, of course,
are chicken breasts, chicken thighs and legs and everything. The chicken's used in the food court
for the chicken bake, because of course, when they make stuff, they actually make it themselves.
When you go buy muffins, those are baked at Costco in their bakery.
There are really only four or five chicken processing companies in America. And when you have supplier concentration like that, prices can get artificially inflated. You know,
you could be on the wrong end of the stick as the buyer when there's so few suppliers.
So Costco decided, we're going to be doing this for a long time. We think our members might be
getting a raw deal, so what should we do?
We can provide more value to members by doing the insane work of processing this ourselves.
So first, they sort of figured out, we can rent 100% of the capacity of a plant in Alabama
to kind of learn the ropes of like, you know, we're warehouse merchants.
Now we're becoming chicken processors?
How does this work?
They learned, and then they proceeded
to build their own fully owned facility
in Fremont, Nebraska, outside of Omaha,
and build relationships with 150 local farmers
in the surrounding area.
I mean, this is nuts.
That facility processes 2 million chickens a week now.
It worked.
To take that even further, there's two other dedicated facilities that they don't fully own, but that just are for Costco.
They can now process 200 million chickens a year.
So while they're still working with the other big chicken processors, at least Costco can keep them honest on pricing now by taking on this huge amount of vertical integration themselves.
Wow. We are going to convert a lot of people to vegans in this part of the episode.
Yeah, and we didn't even talk about the hot dogs.
Yeah, oh boy. Okay, let's move on. Let's move on.
So a much nicer example is like the fancy mixed nuts that I was talking about earlier.
Saw an opportunity to make a better product, work directly with farmers and suppliers and kind of clean up that whole supply chain. They do the same thing in coffee, bring down the price,
increase the amount of fair trade stuff going into the little Keurig pods. It's just like
fascinating to watch when they are willing to leverage their scale to take on additional
complexity, like when they feel that's in the interest of members versus when they say,
you know what? I think we're going to be a merchant on this one.
Yeah. So that's the chickens. One thing is whenever you talk to any of these current or former Costco employees, or you watch any of the YouTube videos of the talks, or you read anything,
they talk in cents. It's the craziest thing. You hear most executives talk and they talk in dollars,
especially like Jensen and NVIDIA. You listen to him talk.
He has CEO speak.
I can't remember exactly what he says, CEO language, something like that.
But it's all in these plus or minus 10% swags.
Few billion here, few billion there, you know, whatever.
We're talking 70% gross margin business for NVIDIA.
Yes, exactly.
I love the concept previous to this episode of CEO math.
It's like, get the high-level concepts right, and the rest will follow. You talk to someone at Costco and
what they tell you is that that costs $3.89. And it's not just $3 things. They'll tell you that
that costs $180.89. It's ingrained in the culture that every cent matters. And I kind of love that
because it's just so different than other companies. Yeah. Well, it's so fitting to
the nature of the business and their
margins. When you have 11% gross margins, you're like, yeah, I care about every penny. You bet.
The thing that kept echoing my head is that these people, and you know, this isn't quite a hero's
journey the way that some of our episodes are. It's not the same person all the way through
because it's Sol Price, it's Jim Senegal, it's all the executives who are currently on the team today because most of them have been
there for 30 plus years. The way that all these people think and act are sort of a different type
of hero's journey because they're a different type of hero. I mean, a lot of the times in our
society, the people we've built up are these crazy sociopath shoot the moon type people.
And this is just a group of people who spent their life's work all working at the same combined company,
just trying to improve the model in little ways. There's so little personal ambition. I mean,
none of these people have LinkedIn profiles. They do, but like they have one job on it and
no picture and no description. Or like, you know, the Costco Twitter account made no tweets ever.
There's a crazy consistency to the culture.
I walked into the headquarters
and the coffee was Kirkland pods from a Keurig.
Like when you sit down in the lobby
and you know, someone says,
oh, would you like a water?
And like, you bet the water that they hand you
is a Kirkland signature water bottle.
I mean, the executives,
you walk by the executives,
they're in cubicles.
It's exactly as you would imagine it.
It's perfectly consistent with Costco. Yes, it's so great. It's exactly as you would imagine it. It's perfectly consistent
with Costco. Yes, it's so great. A few more things to say on this. One, I literally just looked up,
as you were talking, Craig Jelinek's LinkedIn profile. It still says he's an EVP at Costco.
The dude has been CEO for like a decade.
Amazing. The reason I looked up his LinkedIn profile is that the backgrounds of
these people are so different too than what you would typically think of as like the management
team of an American fortune 50 company. Jim went to San Diego city College, right? Craig went to San Diego State University.
They started as baggers at FedMart when they were teenagers,
and they've just worked through the business all the way through.
Yeah, occasionally there's somebody like Giles Bateman who comes in
who went to Harvard Business School, but that is the exception, not the rule.
And it's a hundreds-of-billion-dollar market cap company now.
Yep.
It's amazing.
I will say too that there's this famous quote about Amazon being a charity that's run for
the benefit of customers.
Do you remember that?
I do.
It's actually Costco.
It's actually Costco, right?
On 230 billion of sales, they keep seven and a half billion in operating income.
I've just never seen a company give more consumer surplus than Costco.
They just leave so much on the table for their ecosystem around them.
Yep.
While we're talking about the people here, I think a related but separate playbook theme
is truly the promoting from within culture there.
It's always been the case going all the way back to FedMart and really carries through
to this day.
It's just astonishing to me that a $250 billion market cap company, this is so ingrained in the culture.
Other companies talk about this, but then you'll see like, oh, they go do a CEO search and they
bring in somebody from McKinsey or something like that. Nobody walks the walk on this except
Costco. And they're a very noble company and all the decisions they make are very noble.
And you get the sense that they're having a lot of fun being noble,
but you only earn the right to be noble if your machine works.
And their machine really works.
And I think that's kind of the point,
is they've earned the right.
Acting this nobly partially got them to where they are,
but where they are earns them the right to continue to be noble.
The company has never done a layoff.
If they needed to, they would have done a layoff,
but they've run the business in such a way
and figured out the way
that they've never needed to do that,
even after they did a merger.
They merged two nearly identical companies
and they did not lay anybody off.
Right, that's wild.
It's crazy.
So, amazing management. All right. My
last big playbook item is an old quote. There was a Deutsche Bank analyst that said, it is better to
be an employee or a customer than a shareholder, which Costco management would say, yeah, that's
literally like we've printed it. It's in a PDF on our website that's called our Code of Ethics. Yeah. Do you read our annual report?
So in the short term, maybe. That is a totally reasonable thing to say and no one would argue with it. But in the long term, it has3 million today, a 330x. And this does not include the dividends you would
have earned along the way, which they've actually done a lot of dividends, including four-ish
special dividends too that were huge. I don't know. It's funny how if you want to dip in and
out of the stock in a year or two, it's not going to be great for you. It'll be predictable. It'll
be high priced when you come in, but it's not going to be world changing. But there's a chance that over 30 years,
it is world changing for you. There are no hard and fast rules in investing,
obviously. And if you think there are, that's a great way to lose your shirt.
But it's funny to note that every time we've used a version of that phrase on Acquired when studying a company that
Wall Street analysts think XYZ company is a charity being run for the benefit of X,
turns out that those are pretty great stocks to own.
And great for the long term.
Yep.
Those are the ones that are the most enduring, as our friends at NCS Capital would remind us.
Indeed.
All right, David, bear bowl?
Yeah, let's do it. You want to start, bear bowl? Yeah, let's do it.
You want to start with bear case?
Yes, starting with bear case.
How are you ever going to find a bear case about this company?
I mean, God, I'm like,
can we bring Charlie in here
and lecture you on this?
Well, for better or for worse,
they have been very slow to e-commerce.
Maybe for better, as we talked about,
but maybe for worse.
And we talked about most of it,
but there's a thing that we haven't really discussed yet,
which is Amazon's overhead is like 30%.
Target and Walmart's is something like 20%.
The fact that Costco needs to run at 11% for it to work really did blind them to e-commerce.
I don't think this was a conscious choice.
This was a miss that they got really lucky on and happened to work out well for them, where they could
continue to run their same playbook and kind of skip e-commerce for a long time. I mean,
they were 15 years late to e-commerce. And structurally, Costco can provide things at a
far lower cost than Amazon. But at the end of the day, there really is no way that Costco can do e-commerce like these other companies. I mean, even Walmart's
figured it out. Walmart is as good for most use cases as Amazon, but they're paying the price.
It is a huge amount of overhead to set up the infrastructure to do home delivery.
So one of the things we're going to talk about here in Bear Bull, and I think we should transition, is what Costco is doing that is Costco-flavored e-commerce instead of Amazon-flavored e-commerce.
But I will save that for my bull case.
A second bear case, it was popular in the past to say that Costco would have an issue
with young people.
But I mean, I guess this isn't really a bear case.
This is false for a couple
reasons. There is nothing more Gen Z than Costco. I know. Costco has been blowing up on TikTok,
as we've talked about. But also from all available data, young people are getting memberships at the
same rate they always have. Like, of course, the bulk of members will be people in their 40s and
50s with a family and a house. but that hasn't really changed over time.
If you liked the Costco business in the last decade as an investor, all signs are it's going
to be pretty similar in the next decade too in terms of the ramp of when people become members.
There's another one that's like, I'll put it in bear case, but again, I'm not really sure it's
a bear case. It is worth pointing out. It is either true that this business cannot grow at more than 10% per
year on average, they've had little years where they've spiked, but sort of on average, or
management just doesn't want it to, which also would be fine, because there are lots of benefits
to slow, steady, durable, but the company has a lot of cash on the balance sheet and regularly
does dividends and buybacks. There's this crazy stat from the science of hitting that the company has returned
80% of net income to shareholders in the last decade rather than reinvesting it in growth.
And the key reason for this is that it's just really, really hard to expand.
They need to hire the people, like the right people, train them well, promote internally,
and the work to scale is so physical.
The new construction, expanding suppliers, shipping large pallets into new geographies.
I mean, cash is not the constraint stopping them from expanding. There is a physical limit
to the speed at which this company can grow. So I'm calling that a bear case because it's more like,
you know, you should be aware that this thing can't scale like zoom
scaled during the pandemic that's like the polar opposite of the spectrum zoom or slack or these
has like basically no bottlenecks to infinite instant growth or instagram launching threads
you know instantly has 100 million members costco is the literal opposite there are bottlenecks
everywhere to scaling and no amount of cash is going to solve that problem.
Yep.
Got any bear cases?
I think I'm going to quote Charlie on this one
and say I have nothing more to add.
I thought you might go there.
All right, bull case.
I mean, the biggest one is the flywheel is spinning,
and I'm not really sure who can catch them.
So here's, again, from the science of hitting, Substack. Quote, the average Sam's Club only generates about half the revenues of
a Costco, and that gap has widened over time. Given the unit economics of the business, that's
a tough hurdle to overcome, which explains why Sam's Club has a smaller unit base today than it
did a decade ago. Crazy, right? Over the same period, Costco increased
its U.S. warehouse count by one-third. Anyone who could have challenged them is just done.
Yeah. Maybe part of that is because Walmart has just been placing their resources elsewhere,
particularly in the e-commerce fight against Amazon. Like, I think Walmart has basically
decided, look, we're not going to kill the Sam's Club business, but this is not where we're focusing our competitive energies right now.
And to be more fair, this is no longer a market share fight for the warehouse retail business.
This is global retail.
And then the question is, how much of global retail can Costco's model address?
It's not Costco versus a specific competitor.
It's Costco versus human behavior.
Yeah, how big is this market?
Exactly.
And that, I think, is actually a bull case for Costco.
Because you could argue maybe they aren't saturated in North America, but...
They're not.
They're totally not.
Yeah, I think They're not. They're totally not. Yeah, I think they're not. And they are definitely not saturated in Asia, in the rest of the world, in Europe, in Africa, in Australia.
They have a lot of global room to run. So this is my second bull case, which you touched on the
domestic thing, just as an aside. Every five years on earnings calls and in annual letters, Costco management
reveals that they're surprised by how unsaturated they are in the U.S. market. They'll open a store
in a city where they already have three or four stores, and they're like, and this one did just
as well. And of course, it doesn't have as many members because you do actually saturate the
population of a city, but the convenience of having the store closer
means that it hits the payback targets
that you'd want it to hit just as fast
as a store that was in a brand new market for them.
And at some point, they'll stop being surprised,
or at some point, they actually will saturate
the North American market,
but it's amazing that they keep thinking it's soon
and it's never soon.
My third one is international expansion,
exactly as you're saying.
In particular, China.
There is incredible pent-up demand.
So here's an illustration from the science of hitting,
which is just so good.
The average U.S. store has 68,000 members.
The first store in China opened in 2019,
which popped to 400,000 members within two years.
The U.S. at maturity is at 68,000 members.
China.
Right?
I miss doing our China Tech episodes
because I feel like every 10 minutes in those episodes,
we'd just be like, China.
Like, things are of a different scale there.
If you can operate there.
I mean, that's the big thing is like,
for U.S. companies, it is very complicated to operate there.
So there's going to be six stores in China within the next year.
And all indicators are that this concept performs just as well, if not better, than it does in the U.S.
They have a lot of running room.
So much running room.
And they've been very deliberate about the China strategy.
They got a permit to open their first store 20 years before they actually did.
The Chinese government issued them a permit.
What is more Costco than waiting 20 years after you're allowed to do something to do it when you
feel you're in a good place to do it? Well, A, they're playing the long game. B, the executives
at the time probably were reasonably assured they were still going to be the executives
20 years from then. So like, why not? Oh, it's awesome. All right, here's my fourth bull case,
and it's actually e-commerce.
Bear with me for a minute on this.
They're approaching e-commerce in a very Costco way,
and they have a bunch of different approaches,
but there's two specific ones I want to highlight.
One, where they have differentiation,
which is on big and bulky items,
that's where they're putting a lot of their energy.
They spent a billion dollars to buy a company
that became Costco Logistics,
and they do things like deliver sheds to your house.
And this is a pretty difficult thing to do from a traditional e-commerce company
or an e-commerce native company.
This is sheds.
This is refrigerators.
This is washing machines.
This is water heaters.
Right.
Didn't you almost just order a fridge this morning on Costco?
Exactly. I'm
saying this because I almost had to replace my refrigerator. Turns out I was able to get it
repaired, thankfully. But I was briefly in the market for a refrigerator, and it was super
interesting dynamics. Costco had the lowest price on the model that I was looking at,
but only by like $20 versus Best Buy and Home Depot.
It's like $1,500 or something, right?
Yeah, like a $1,500 refrigerator,
which I'm glad I didn't have to buy.
But all the other players,
clearly the manufacturer was a Samsung refrigerator,
was running a promotion.
So the MSRP was $2,000
and all those other retailers were saying, oh, this week only it's on sale was $2,000 and all those other retailers
were saying oh this week only
it's on sale for $1,500
and Costco had it for like $1,470
next week Costco will still have it
for $1,470 and it'll be $2,000
at Best Buy
yep that's exactly right
and so I do think this is an interesting area
for Costco and e-commerce
the second one is CostcoNext.com
do you know what this is, David?
No, I didn't find this.
It allows you to shop directly on other websites and put in your Costco number and get a discount.
Oh, that's awesome.
Costco cuts a deal with those companies to say, we're going to send you traffic as long as the
traffic we send you, once you verify it, you give those people a discount.
Wait, so this is literally like
Ebates or Rakuten for Costco?
Yes.
So Costco looks at it like,
oh great, we get to give yet another value
to our members
without having to take on
the e-commerce logistics that they hate
that complicates their business
that changes people's impression
of what Costco is.
Fascinating.
It's like the obvious way for them to play this market for anyone who's willing to partner with them. Which again, to the
supplier dynamics, it's the same thing here. Like on the surface, if you're XYZ e-commerce player,
that'd be crazy. But then you think about it and you're like, well, we could get a lot of very high
value traffic. Maybe we should do this.
It's like selling through Costco without having to sell through Costco, without having to physically
drop stuff at their warehouse. And it's the internet way to sell through Costco.
Amazing.
So my last bull case really is Costco's culture. It just outlives any given quarter,
year, economic cycle, or even any CEO. Normally,
when companies get bigger, things get worse. Standards of excellence fall and execution
gets sloppy. And Costco has just been exactly the opposite of that.
I mean, Costco was sort of technically founded in 1976 with Price Club. You can really say it was
started with FedMart before that. Let's just say it was 1976. Here we are
in 2023. There have been three CEOs in the history of Costco. Sol Price, Jim Senegal,
Craig Jelinek, all of whom worked at FedMart. Yes. Crazy. Okay. I have a bunch of Costco trivia
before we get to carve-outs. Yeah, let's do it. All right.
Costco is the largest seller in the world of fine wines.
Fine wines are defined as $20 to $300 bottles.
Like, what?
Costco is the... But they're just the largest seller of things.
Well, that is the most amazing encapsulation of their demographic.
Yes.
It's wealthy people who like value.
A deal.
Yes, exactly. Do you know their
refund policy? No questions asked, right? No questions asked. How long do you think it lasts?
Infinite. Infinite. There is an exception on things like electronics. Those are 90 days,
but that's 75 more days than anywhere else.
Yep, Apple is two weeks.
If I buy a MacBook Pro at Costco, it's a 90-day return policy.
If I buy it at Apple, it's a 14-day return policy.
Yep.
In fact, I'm sitting here, I really want to buy a 13-inch MacBook Air,
but I'm afraid that the 13-inch MacBook Air is about to become the M3 later this year.
I should just
go buy it at Costco. Now, that is not really the behavior that they want to encourage. And I do
know that if you sort of take advantage of it over and over and over again, they do sort of take you
aside and say, hey, it seems like we're not providing enough value to you. Let us refund
the membership. We're so sorry. We couldn't do a great job. What a great way to phrase kicking you out. But I will tell you,
the infinite return policy includes things like diamond rings. Whoa! Wait, if you get divorced,
you can return the engagement ring? Last year, they sold a 10-carat diamond ring,
and that diamond ring, to my knowledge, has a lifetime, no questions asked, full value return policy.
Wow. So there's some fun Seattle history around this. Do you know where the inspiration-
Nordstrom.
Yeah, for this policy came from?
That's funny. I didn't know, but it's just Nordstrom is such a famous
local story around their favorable return policy.
Yeah. So Jim and Jeff Brotman, before he tragically too young passed
away a few years ago, they would talk about this, especially Jeff and the Brotmans being Seattle
retailers. They were hugely influenced by Nordstrom and Nordstrom famously has the same return policy.
Do you know the potentially apocryphal story about the famous return at Nordstrom?
No. It may not be real, but at some point, somebody brought
tires back to Nordstrom and said, I'd like to return these. And instead of saying, well,
we don't sell tires, the person thought about it for a while and said, well, could you just tell
me a little bit more information? And they said, well, I bought these here and they named a year.
And it turns out that before that real estate was a Nordstrom, it was actually a tire center.
And Nordstrom gave the guy money and took the tires.
Amazing. Okay, well, while we're on Costco trivia and tires, there's a famous Sol Price story.
I think this was in the Price Club days when they were opening one of the early
non-San Diego locations, the first new expansion sites. He showed up and he saw tires. Their tires was
one of the things that they sold at Price Club. And the tires were all like neatly stacked on the
warehouse shelves. And he walks up and he starts throwing them off the shelves onto the floor.
And police are like, Saul, what are you doing? Have you gone crazy? What's happening? And he's
like, you effing idiots.
How are the customers going to be able to pick up the tires
when they're up high on the shelves?
They got to be down on the floor.
Oh, wow.
I do know, by the way,
Nordstrom has since adjusted its return policy
to actually be capped, not infinite.
And so now Costco has a better return policy than Nordstrom.
Wild. All right, more stats, and so now Costco has a better return policy than Nordstrom. Amazing. Wild.
Alright, more stats, just for fun.
They sold 2.2 million pumpkin pies in the three
days leading up to Thanksgiving last year.
They sell one-third of
the jumbo cashews in the entire world.
They,
of course, sell eyeglasses, and
this is one of the areas where they felt they should vertically integrate.
I actually don't know why,
but I suspect it's because
prices are artificially high
in the entire glasses supply chain.
Oh, yeah, the eyeglass industry
is notoriously brutal in this.
So Costco now owns and operates
three optical grinding labs
to make prescription eyeglasses.
So great. It's so great.
It's the craziest thing.
And then lastly, here's an illustration of their culture.
I think they definitely believe that you must work long, smart, and hard
if you're going to be a leader there.
And none are optional.
You just have to do it.
And to illustrate this, all of their market managers and country managers
come to headquarters for two days every single month. So no matter what market you manage, you fly to Issaquah, that's 160 people, to all sit in a room for two days and just talk about what's working, what's not, what you're seeing, and how the talks I watched on YouTube, that when he was CEO, and I think Craig does the same thing to this day, he visited every store every year.
Yes, he did.
And there are hundreds of stores around the world. There are way more Costco stores out there than there are days in the year.
Yep. The dedication's incredible. Crazy. All right, carve-outs?
Carve-outs. All right. I have two, and I'm going
to do them both because they're fast and small. The first one, there's a brand called Tifosi,
T-I-F-O-S-I, that makes sunglasses for running. And you can wear them for other stuff too, but
I love them because they are sunglasses that don't slip off my face when you're running or doing
something and you get sweaty. They have
these little grippy pads that sit on the nose. And I feel like I've solved this thing that was
mildly annoying in my life for a very long time, which is just continually pushing up my
sunglasses while running. So highly recommend Tifosi. They're also pretty cheap. I bought
like three pair and they're goofy and different colors and they're fun.
Amazing. You are becoming Phil Knight during his Oakley phase.
Yes, exactly.
The second is a mashup that I found last night
when I was looking for cool stuff to listen to
while finishing the research and editing the script.
Thank you to Jason Kotke, author of Kotke.org, for posting this.
There is a New York City DJ named Dwells
who released a mashup about four
months ago of Everything in Its Right Place by Radiohead and Kendrick Lamar's N95. And it is
so sick. That sounds awesome. It's probably because I'm like a huge, I don't listen to
Radiohead that much anymore, but like in college. Oh, you used to be really into it. Seven hours a
day or something. Yeah. Like whenever I was programming, it was just Radiohead all the time, but it like instantly took me back to that
place in my life and is honestly one of the best mashups I've ever heard. I didn't know mashups
were still a thing. That's awesome. I used to love mashups. In some like DJ subculture. I mean,
it is crazy how mainstream like Girl Talk and what was the other one? The White Panda were for a
while.
Massive.
So love it.
Yeah.
Radiohead and Kendrick Lamar.
We'll link to it in the show notes.
All right.
Inspired by you since you did two carve-outs, I'm also going to do two carve-outs.
The first is a great episode of Invest Like the Best.
Friend of the show, Patrick, over there with Jeremy Jiffon.
So good.
Also friend of the show.
This was going to be my third also.
Yeah, it was so good.
One of the best podcast episodes.
Just period all year, I think.
But especially because we know Jeremy pretty well from Tiny.
And, you know, we know Patrick very well.
Like, even hanging out with them a lot,
learned a ton still listening to their conversation. And this conversation, I'll tell you,
is exactly like hanging out with Jeremy, but in higher density. His personality is exactly how
he comes across on the podcast, but it's definitely a best of. You know, whenever I hang out with
Jeremy, I get like six or seven kind of mind-blowing one-liners, these like insights that just come to
him out of nowhere. And the podcast has 30 in an hour and a half. It's just awesome. Yeah, it's just awesome. Go listen to it.
Well, well, well worth your time. Yep. My second carve-out, this is a fun local one. Jenny and I
did a date night last week. Highly recommend for any parents out there. We have a standing
babysitter who we love. Friday night, weekly date night, unless something changes. Wow, good for you.
Highly recommend that.
But we went out in Dogpatch in San Francisco, which I hadn't been to in a long time.
It's become such a cool neighborhood.
Went to this awesome wine bar there.
We walked around.
We got ice cream at Humphrey Slocum afterwards.
Dogpatch is right on the water in the bay.
It's got an interesting history.
It was the headquarters, I think, of's got an interesting history. It was the
headquarters, I think, of Hell's Angels for a long time during like the 50s and 60s.
You worked there, right? Didn't you, when you were an intern?
Dog Patch Labs on Pier, I'm trying to remember the actual number, but yeah,
there was a co-working space when I worked at CoTweet. Actually, they condemned the pier and
took it down because it was like, we were the last year that it was still, I don't know,
we probably shouldn't have had an office in it.
But yeah, I worked at CoTweet.
And above us was the co-working space where the Instagram guys launched Instagram.
That's right.
But yeah, you probably remember back then,
I mean, Dogpatch was kind of like a random outskirts of San Francisco.
Sleepy little neighborhood.
It's become awesome.
Walked by a game shop where they had ladies D&D night
going on. It's just super cool. Going to hang out there more often. So if you come to San Francisco,
don't hang out downtown. Downtown is not a good place. The rest of the city is awesome.
Go to Dogpatch. It's a very different experience. Thank you for saving me from, I was going to stay
at a hotel on Market Street and you were like, do not do that. Dear God, do not do that. I may never see you again.
But that's where all the hotels are. It's a big problem. I know. Airbnb is a thing.
Airbnb. All right. With that, sign up for notifications of new episodes. We just flipped
this thing live, acquired.fm slash email. We are going to be including little tidbits after we
release episodes, including listener corrections and little fun stories that we didn't have in time for recording.
We'll also be teasing future episodes.
So if you want to play a little trivia game with us to try and guess what next episode is going to be, that is where we're going to be dropping those hints.
You can become an LP.
Acquire.fm.
Become closer to the show.
Do Zoom calls with us every other month or so.
And at least once a season help pick the next episode acquired.fm slash LP.
LPs chose Nike,
our most recent episode before this one.
They did.
Oh,
one thing we should say in case you don't follow us on social media and
didn't see the tweets about it.
Friend of the show,
David Lidsky did an awesome,
truly awesome piece in Fast Company about Acquired.
And we're super grateful that he took the time and dove deep and spent many hours with both of us.
It was super cool.
Lots and lots of time basically tracking us as we were preparing the Nike episode.
And since he's been listening since 2017, 18, he knew a lot of the history of the show.
And so he wrote this really cool piece. If you are one
of the people who has emailed us over the years and said, it'd be great if you guys did something
talking about how your research process for acquired works, David chronicled that and much
better than David or I ever could have. So thank you, David Lidsky. Really appreciate it. We will
link to the Fast Company piece in the show notes too. Look for ACQ2 if you want to learn more about AI in any podcast player.
And check out the Slack.
Come discuss it with us.
Acquired.fm slash Slack.
Listeners, we'll see you next time.
I'm going to go get a hot dog and a soda.
I'll see you there and get a chicken bake.
How much are the chicken bakes?
More than $1.50.
But, you know, it's more substantial than a hot dog.
It's like 3,000 calories.
It's like 900 calories
wow but yeah you're not you're doing a lot of other eating that day
i love it all right listeners we'll see you next time we'll see you next time
who got the truth is it you is it you is it you who got the truth now Move now, huh