
NYSE:HD
This summary was created by AI, based on 20 opinions in the last 12 months.
Home Depot (HD-N) is facing significant challenges this year, being down about 15% amid rising interest rates, which has adversely affected housing activities. Reviewers express concerns regarding the company's earnings outlook, particularly in light of a tumultuous quarter overshadowed by the ongoing US-Iran conflict and high inflation. Despite these hurdles, some reviews indicate a potential for recovery if interest rates stabilize and mortgage rates decrease. Home Depot remains a dominant player in the home improvement sector, with strengths in e-commerce and market share expansion, though the current environment is affecting consumer spending and housing renovations. Analysts maintain a cautious yet hopeful stance, suggesting that the stock could be viewed as a long-term buy if interest rates begin to fall.
They just reported revenues a little light and EPS also missed, basically was flat YOY, but the quarter was still good. The misses were partly based on poor weather last quarter (a wet spring). Same-stores sales over the quarter locked flat, but was +3.1% in July after two flat months. Management is confident in its distribution centres and reiterated its full-year forecast. If interest rates fall (looking likely), it will only help the housing and home improvement market. The tariff hit will be minimized because many HD products are made in the US.
Covid saw overspending by consumers, then underspending, now normalizing. Rising interest rates have affected lower-income US households, and that's showing up in HD traffic numbers. In US, over 50% of homes are over 40 years old; long-term secular trend to repair and modernize.
Last September, he sold and took profits. Shares are trading ~24x forward PE, for 5% EPS growth. Valuation's expensive. EPS growth rate expectations have come down. Cautious spending by consumers, stock's slipped below 200-day MA. Long-term inflation is dampening the DIYers, sluggish home sales. A name to own early economic cycle, and we're about mid-way through now.
Interest rates cuts are stalling, so shares are -7.74% the past month; housing turnover and the weather have been bad. Tool sales are down. It reports tomorrow, but he will buy after that report. He has faith, because when the street was shorting this in 2008's housing crisis, HD gained market share and bought back a ton of shares.
Trump tariffs will cause a decline in consumer spending. This is why Trump is pressing the Fed to cut interest rates to boost consumer spending. Lower rates will help anything connected to a home equity loan--therefore HD. This is why HD is rallying despite tariff pressure