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Today's editorial pick for you
The Bull Case for Casey's General Stores Is Hiding in Plain Sight
Posted On Mar 10, 2026 by Chris Markoch
Casey’s General Stores (NASDAQ: CASY)has quietly become one of the most compelling stories in American retail. The Midwestern convenience store chain has grown from a regional fuel stop into a 2,900-store empire with an enterprise value of $25 billion. The stock closed Monday at $664.54, well above its 50-day moving average of $630.93, a technical signal that suggests sustained momentum.
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What’s driving that momentum? Institutional investors appear to be voting with their wallets. Recent 13-F filings show institutional buying running roughly 2-to-1 in favor of buyers versus sellers in dollar volume — a meaningful signal in a market where conviction is scarce.
Casey’s third-quarter fiscal 2026 earnings report, released March 9, reinforces why the big money is paying attention. EBITDA for the quarter ended January 31 came in at $308.9 million, up 27.5% year over year, with diluted EPS of $3.49, up 49.8%. Management raised its full-year fiscal 2026 EBITDA growth guidance to 18%–20%. For patient investors, those numbers tell a story of compounding discipline that few retailers can match.
Casey’s EBITDA Growth Makes It a Rare Retail Compounding Story
Among S&P 500 and S&P 400 retailers, Casey’s is one of only three companies that delivered 8%-or-better EBITDA growth over one-, five-, and ten-year time horizons simultaneously, joining Costco (NASDAQ: COST) and Ollie’s Bargain Outlet (NASDAQ: OLLI) in that exclusive club. That consistency is the backbone of management’s raised full-year guidance, now targeting 18%–20% EBITDA growth for fiscal 2026.
The strategy is built on three pillars: accelerating the food business, growing store count, and enhancing operational efficiency. With the rewards program surpassing 10 million active members in the third quarter and the private label program exceeding 300 SKUs, Casey’s is achieving margin gains that most convenience store operators cannot replicate. Its nine-month inside gross margin of 42.2% towers over the industry average of 37%, a gap driven by prepared food and reduced tobacco dependency.
Nine-month EBITDA through January 31 reached $1.13 billion, up 21% from the same period a year ago. That puts the company well on track to exceed last fiscal year’s $1.2 billion full-year result.
Institutional Ownership Trends Point to Continued Confidence
When institutions buy stock at a 2-to-1 clip over sellers in dollar terms, it typically signals one of two things: undervaluation or earnings visibility. In Casey’s case, it may be both. The company trades at roughly 18x forward EBITDA — above the convenience store median of around 10–12x, but in line with quick-service restaurant (QSR) and retail medians, according to the company’s March 2026 investor presentation.
That valuation premium is supported by a differentiated business model that is hard to replicate. Approximately two-thirds of Casey’s stores operate in towns with 20,000 people or fewer, giving it a rural moat that larger competitors find difficult to penetrate economically. Add in three owned distribution centers and a tanker fleet that delivers roughly 60% of its fuel, and you have a vertically integrated operation with structural cost advantages that show up directly on the margin line.
Could a Stock Split Be the Next Catalyst for CASY?
At $664 per share, Casey’s isn’t priced out of retail reach, but it’s not cheap either. The company has executed four stock splits in its history, most recently decades ago when share prices reached levels that management felt warranted an adjustment. With the stock having run from roughly $400 to nearly $700 over the past year, the question is fair to raise.
No split has been announced, and the company has not signaled one publicly. But at current prices, a 2-for-1 split would bring shares into a range more accessible to individual investors and could modestly expand the retail shareholder base. That move would complement the company’s community-rooted brand identity.
Technical Analysis: Bullish Structure With Short-Term Consolidation Likely
The daily chart tells a broadly constructive story. CASY has been in a sustained uptrend since last spring, consistently holding above its rising 50-day simple moving average, currently at $630.93. The recent spike in volume — 981,000 shares, well above the typical daily average near 305,000 — accompanied a pullback from February highs near $700, which warrants attention.
The RSI sits at 53.79 on the daily, with the signal line at 66.16 — a mild bearish divergence suggesting short-term consolidation is more likely than a straight run higher. The post-market reading of $649.85 reflects some digestion after a strong multi-month advance. Support near the 50-day MA and the $630–$640 zone would be the level to watch on any further weakness.
Casey’s Remains a Long-Term Compounder Worth Watching
Casey’s General Stores is not a flashy growth story — it’s a grinder. A 50-year-old company that keeps adding stores, improving margins, and generating cash. With institutional buyers firmly in control, a strong balance sheet, raised full-year guidance, and a proven management team delivering top-quintile EBITDA growth, CASY deserves a close look from investors who favor durable businesses over short-term trades.
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