Home Depot: Homeowners signaling signs of economic concerns ...Middle East

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Home Depot: Homeowners signaling signs of economic concerns

Home Depot reported a key sales metric that beat expectations in the latest quarter on steady demand, though the retailer cautioned that macroeconomic challenges remain.

Comparable sales, which track performance at locations open at least a year, rose 0.4% in the quarter ended Feb. 1, better than the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Earnings per share, excluding some items, also outpaced expectations in the period.

    The results suggest that the appetite for home projects is holding steady despite elevated interest rates and persistent inflation concerns. Home Depot said it gained market share, while also achieving double-digit e-commerce growth for a third straight quarter.

    Still, a meaningful change in housing demand has yet to materialize.

    “Our customers have been on the sideline with respect to large remodeling projects for three years now,” Chief Financial Officer Richard McPhail said in an interview. “The homeowner is one of the healthiest customer cohorts out there, but they tell us that uncertainty is growing, that there’s concern around housing affordability, around job losses.”

    Home Depot is the latest big-box retailer to post results this earnings season, with key competitor Lowe’s Cos. scheduled to report on Wednesday. Walmart Inc. offered a conservative outlook last week due to a fluid economic backdrop, though it said consumers’ spending habits have been consistent.

    Positive signs

    There are some early positive signs for housing: Mortgage rates have dipped, while median home prices have stayed relatively flat over the past year. McPhail said mortgage rates would need to decrease and income levels would have to increase in a more pronounced way for growth to accelerate.

    “Everything is moving very slowly in the right direction, but we haven’t seen a catalyst for a change in home-improvement demand,” he said. Home Depot reiterated its full-year forecast.

    Consumer sentiment has been volatile, while affordability challenges remain and employment barely grew in the US last year. US tariff policy is once again in flux after the Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s expansive global levies last week. Trump has promised new levies, but questions remain on their level, how they’ll be implemented and for how long.

    Home Depot is analyzing the potential impact of these changes, McPhail said, adding that the company had largely moved through the impact of tariffs before the latest announcements. Some items will “modestly” get more expensive during the first half of this year following price increases the retailer recently implemented.

    The retailer produced modest growth across the year, but its outlook is “relatively soft and clouded in uncertainty,” Neil Saunders, managing director at GlobalData Plc, wrote Tuesday in a note to clients.

    “The factors holding growth back are almost all external, but given these dynamics have been present for a while it is also incumbent on Home Depot to explore how it can drive better numbers by exposing itself to higher growth pockets in the market,” he said.

    Larger discretionary projects remain under pressure, Home Depot executives said on a call with analysts, with sales gaining last quarter in half of the company’s product categories. Consumers spent more per trip during the period, underscoring some price increases and an interest in paying up for new items.

    During the company’s extended slowdown, Home Depot has focused on its faster-growing business that serves professional contractors, who spend more than everyday customers. It has also sought to expand its digital operations and offer AI-enhanced shopping. To combat tariffs, Home Depot has diversified sourcing. Company executives said during an investor day in December that pent-up demand has been building up since 2023 will eventually translate to spending.

    The retailer recently cut corporate roles and is requiring staff return to the office as it looks to recapture growth. It’s also making the requirements for bonus payouts to management more strict, Bloomberg News reported last week.

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