Here's What Home Depot and Lowe's Just Told Stock Market Investors About the Broader Economy

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Home Depot (NYSE: HD) and Lowe's (NYSE: LOW) have a combined market cap of over half a trillion dollars. So, when they report earnings, the market tends to listen.

Both home improvement giants act as bellwethers for the broader economy, the health of the consumer, and the housing market.

Here are some key takeaways from their recent reports and whether either dividend stock is worth buying now.

A person engaging in a do-it-yourself landscaping project by laying stones outside.
Image source: Getty Images.

Guidance cuts

Wall Street hates uncertainty. So, it's a bad look when companies fall short of expectations.

Home Depot and Lowe's just reported decent results, but both companies cut their full-year guidance.

Home Depot's initial guidance called for 1% growth in diluted earnings per share (EPS) and a 1% increase in sales. But this fiscal year has 53 weeks, so considering that additional week would mean comparable sales and earnings would be slightly down.

Home Depot's updated guidance as of the second quarter is for fiscal 2024 comparable sales to decline 3% to 4% and adjusted EPS to decline slightly even with the benefit of the 53rd week. Operating margin is expected to be 13.8% to 13.9% compared to an initial estimate of 14.1%.

Meanwhile, Lowe's expected full-year 2024 sales of $84 billion to $85 billion -- down 2% to 3% on a comparable basis. It was guiding for an operating margin of 12.6% to 12.7% and diluted EPS of $12 to $12.30 compared to $13.20 in fiscal 2023. Its new guidance calls for $82.7 billion to $83.2 billion in sales, a 12.4% to 12.5% operating margin, and adjusted EPS of $11.70 to $11.90.

In sum, Lowe's revision is slightly worse than Home Depot's, but both companies are seeing margin compression. They are forecasting lower sales, adjusted EPS, and operating margins than last year.

A worsening situation

Home Depot blamed higher interest rates, macroeconomic uncertainty, and bad weather for softness in spring home improvement projects. The lower end of its updated guidance range is based on additional pressure on consumers in the second half of the year.

Similarly, Lowe's continues to discuss interest rates and inflation pressures. Its customers are being patient and not rushing to spend on do-it-yourself (DIY) home improvement projects.

In other words, there's no catalyst for business to pick up in the short term.

Facing limited options during the pandemic, consumers shifted their spending away from services toward goods spending, which led to a surge in demand for products sold by Home Depot and Lowe's, and altered the home improvement spending cycle. Consumers don't always buy big-ticket items like grills and patio furniture. So the pandemic basically pulled forward a lot of those sales and concentrated them in a short time frame. The good news is that we are now a few years removed from that unusual period. And Home Depot said that it is almost done working through that pull-through.