11 Best Retail Stocks To Buy Now

In This Article:

In this article, we will be taking a look at the 11 best retail stocks to buy now. To skip our detailed analysis of the retail sector, you can go directly to see the 5 Best Retail Stocks To Buy Now.

How Has The Retail Sector Been Performing?

With rising inflation that the Federal Reserve has been continuously striving to combat, it should come as no surprise to most people that your typical consumer has been unable to spend as much as they would like to. In such an economic environment, many consumers and investors would expect the retail sector to suffer. While this may be true to some extent, it should come as a comfort to investors that the retail sector is continuing to put up a good fight, as evidenced by its performance in the month of September.

On October 17, CNBC's "Squawk Box" noted that retail sales in September were actually much higher than expected. Here's what CNBC's Rick Santelli had to say on the matter:

"Retail sales hitting the wires for the month of September. Expecting up three tenths on headline, more than double, up seven tenths of one percent. To find a higher number than that, you have to go back to January when we were up 2.8%, although we did have another seven tenths screen in May."

This growth of 0.7% in comparison to the expected growth for retail sales, which was 0.3%, is a hopeful indicator that despite the inflationary environment, the retail sector is managing to stay in the green. Such performance can be a motivator for investors looking to invest in retail stocks today, especially those like Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), Alibaba Group Holding Limited (NYSE:BABA), and Walmart Inc. (NYSE:WMT), since these are arguably some of the best retail stocks to buy now.

What Can We Expect From The Sector In 2024?

On October 24, Matthew Boss, JPMorgan's retail analyst, joined CNBC's "Squawk on the Street" to talk about his retail playbook heading into the next year. Here's what he had to say:

"I've been a broken record on this show talking about value and convenience. That's what matters to the low-to-middle income consumer. Walmart, Target, the discounters, the grocers, they've invested a tremendous amount of money over the last five years to be more convenient. Technology, battling up against the e-commerce retailers - I think that the small-box retailers, the dollar stores have lost a step on this convenience element, which means there's an increased battle on value, which translates to margin compression. So our view is for value and convenience, it's off-price. I love TJX and Ross Stores. I think that what they're doing, they're bringing top, known brands to the consumer at great values, and I think that's the way to win in '24 and '25."