European Postal Services Halt US Parcel Deliveries Amid Trump Tariff Escalation Fallout
Europe's mail carriers hit the brakes on US-bound packages—Trump's tariff war just went global.
Shipping Standstill
Multiple European postal services suspend parcel deliveries to the United States, citing unsustainable cost increases from newly imposed tariffs. The move disrupts cross-border e-commerce and international shipments overnight.
Trade Tensions Bite
Retaliatory measures trigger operational paralysis, forcing logistics networks to reroute or halt services entirely. Consumers and businesses face delayed deliveries and higher costs as supply chains reconfigure.
Financial Fallout
Another brilliant policy move—because nothing boosts economies like strangling international trade and making everyday goods more expensive for everyone. Tariff man strikes again.
Image source: Getty Images.
Walmart is quite a bit larger than Costco, with a market cap of $778 billion, versus $441 billion for Costco. Walmart has more than 10,000 stores on four continents and is the world's largest retailer by sales. Costco is the world's third-largest retailer; it has a membership model, with roughly 900 locations and 79.6 million paid household members and 37.6 million paid executive memberships. While they sell all kinds of items, Walmart and Costco rank as grocery behemoths.
Costco stock is up roughly 6% this year as of Aug. 21 and 181% over the past five years, while Walmart stock has gained roughly 8% year-to-date and 123% over five years.
Strong inflation era results
Walmart and Costco often do well when inflation pushes prices higher and shoppers look for bargains.
From January 2022 to February 2023, when year-over-year headline inflation ranged from 6% to 9.1%, Walmart kept the increase in grocery prices to 3%, compared to average price increases of 7.5% or more at rivals like,, and, according to a Reuters analysis. Walmart's size and buying power help it force suppliers to keep prices lower.
As a result, in its fiscal 2024, ended Jan. 31 of that year, Walmart grew total revenue in constant currency 6% to $648 billion and its adjusted earnings per share 5.7% higher to $6.65. In the 52 weeks following that earnings announcement, Walmart shares climbed 66%.
Costco, on the other hand, makes a large percentage of its profits from membership income -- membership fees totaled about 65% of net income in the most recently reported quarter. That business model -- along with a reputation for good deals -- helps steady the company's results during an inflation spike. In its fiscal 2023 (ended Sept. 3 of that year), Costco saw U.S. net sales grow 6.7% to almost $238 billion. Membership fees increased 8% that year, to $4.58 billion.
In the 52 weeks after that earnings release, Costco stock ROSE 63%.
And just recently, in its third quarter of 2025, the retailer reported a 10.4% increase in its membership fee income, to more than $1.2 billion. Last September Costco raised membership fees by $5, to $65 a year, yet it saw no meaningful decline in members after the increase.
Both businesses and their stocks benefit from rising overall prices because they're able to either keep prices lower than the competition (Walmart), which drives sales, or rely on membership fees (Costco) that drive profits.
What does the future hold?
So which stock should you invest in today in anticipation of rising grocery prices in the months ahead?
Well, stock prices ultimately track earnings growth. And analysts expect Costco to increase earnings per share for the current quarter by 10% (results will be released on Sept. 25).
As for Walmart, the retail behemoth released its second-quarter results this week and they were slightly disappointing. Adjusted earnings per share of $0.68 were lower than the average analyst estimate of $0.73, and that sent the stock 5% lower on Thursday. Revenue, however, came in at $177.4 billion, almost $2 billion higher than estimates.
Thus, the picture is mixed. Rising grocery prices will impact all U.S. retailers, and both Costco and Walmart have a history of thriving when that happens. With the uncertainty of Trump's tariff policies still high, however, Costco's membership-driven model may put it in a more advantageous position going forward.