Home Depot Stock Looks Risky Even After Better-Than-Expected Earnings

 | Aug 22, 2022 16:28

  • Home Depot has benefited from aspects of the coronavirus pandemic, not least the sharp appreciation in home prices over the past two-plus years
  • Down 22% year-to-date, the valuation assigned HD stock is more reasonable—but remains questionable
  • Home Depot may simply be such a dominant company that these risks won’t play out, but investors still need to be on guard
  • In fiscal 2022 (ending January of next year), Home Depot (NYSE:HD) is expected to generate roughly $156 billion in revenue. That comes from the average Wall Street estimate, which in turn is informed by Home Depot’s guidance for same-store sales growth of approximately 3% this year. 

    In fiscal 2019, Home Depot’s revenue totaled $110 billion, meaning that the company has added approximately $46 billion in sales in three years. 

    That is a staggering figure. To put it into context, during the past four quarters, Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) generated just $32 billion in revenue. Over the same stretch, Home Depot’s main rival Lowe’s Companies Inc (NYSE:LOW) posted sales of $96 billion—barely twice the dollar growth Home Depot has generated in just three years.

    Even in the context of Home Depot’s own history, $46 billion is outstanding. In the decade between FY09 and FY19 (a decade that began amid the financial crisis), Home Depot added only $44 billion in sales. For those ten years, revenue grew at an annualized rate of 5.2%. Over the subsequent three years, growth accelerated dramatically to more than 12% per year. 

    h2 Is Home Depot A Pandemic Winner?/h2

    That step-change in growth begs the question: why isn’t Home Depot considered a pandemic winner? 

    After all, the massive increase in growth is due largely to factors outside of Home Depot’s control. Indeed, the company continues to execute well. It’s invested heavily and successfully in digital efforts, and its dominance in the Pro segment has kept Lowe’s firmly in second place.

    But even second-place Lowe’s has seen sales increase more than 10% annually over the last three years (assuming its consensus estimates for FY22 revenue are roughly correct). 

    The tailwinds from a strong housing market and flush consumer balance sheets are driving much of the growth for both companies.

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    High inflation is boosting 2022 sales performance to some extent, but even accounting for that, Home Depot sales have accelerated markedly from their pre-pandemic pace. 

    That kind of growth simply isn’t sustainable. In fact, Home Depot’s guidance for the year suggests sales are going to slow. Given that revenue increased more than 5% in the first half, full-year guidance suggests second-half growth of less than 2%. 

    h2 The Case Looking Forward/h2

    At more than 19x this year’s earnings, Home Depot stock hardly seems priced for deceleration. Investors and analysts—whose average target price suggests 13.3% upside from the current price—see growth continuing.