The markets had a strong start to the week, led mainly by Bank stocks
and the Tech sector. However, the two biggest names in Home Improvement
were also on tap to deliver results. Lowe's (LOW) delivered Monday with bigger brother & competitor Home Depot (HD) coming in on Tuesday.
During
Monday's bullish day, Lowe's was able to capitalize on results that
beat expectations and climb 7% utilizing its first-reporter advantage.
Now although profits fell 22% year over year, expectations were for a
more severe drop. Income came in at $476Million vs $607Million in the
year ago quarter ($0.32/share), while on the top line, Revenue was
$11.83Billion vs $12.01Billion, a drop of 2%.
Compared to
expectations of $11.63Billion in Revenue and $0.25/share in Income, it
would appear that Lowe's is holding onto business at a better than
expected clip. However, talk from traders, and what was wildly reported
by the Investment media was that the expectation beating results were
driven primarily by cost-cutting, as top line Revenue numbers were
rather muted.
Lowe's did its best to try and appease Investors
by guiding higher for next quarter with a range of profits from $0.51
to $0.55 per share, compared to Wall Street's numbers of $0.50 per
share in earnings. Lowe's continues to pay its quarterly dividend, with
a yield standing at about 1.7%.
Housing data coming out Tuesday
morning along with results from Home Depot were worrisome to Investors
at the start of trading. Housing starts, which is a big part of the
Home Depot and Lowe's business models fell 13% to a record low in
April, according to the latest figures. These headlines took much steam
of out of a pretty good Home Depot report which largely mirrored Lowe's
from the day before. Once investors digested the news, there was a few
points that could act as silver linings for bullish traders. First off,
the number was actually better than the forecast by economists (485000
vs 525000 expected), and second, a majority of the drop off was due to
condos and related living fixtures. An area of the Home Improvement
sector generally not suited to the repeat home renovation business that
both Lowe's and Home Depot rely heavily on. Case in point, the number
of new pure housing starts actually rose by nearly 3% in April, which
provided some good news in this sector, hence the rebound in Lowe's
stock to near break even territory.
The Home Depot stock story
today, is unfortunately not as rosy, as many buyers of the stock
yesterday retreated today, selling on the expected earnings news.
Nearly a 10% drop in Revenue to $16.2Billion was met with mixed
reaction even though profits were above expectations, mainly due to
cost cutting. Ex-items Home Depot earned $0.35/share versus analyst
expectations of $0.29/share, which had been baked into the stock
already given Lowe's nearly identical performance just a day ago. Home
Depot lost around 4% this morning and hasn't seen the same uptick as
its smaller competitor after the housing report had been looked over.
Home Depot has the added benefit of a dividend yield, twice the size of
Lowe's for those keeping score.
These stocks will largely trade
in tandem, as the economy recovers as both are similarly priced to
earnings and both have the cushion of a dividend yield for the more
conservative Investor. With foreclosures still likely to rise in the
near future and the unemployment number still showing no signs of
turning back around for now the time to invest in these names will
still present itself later in the year. You can only go so far on cost
cutting alone, and Wall Street will only celebrate this type of
approach for a few quarters before some real questions have to be
answered on the conference calls. For now both should be a Hold, but as
economic indicators improve and the work force stabilizes and begins to
grow again, there will be a surge of pent-up Home Improvement demand
going into 2010. There will still be time to own these names, but for a
longer term play LEAPS should be in the investment cards for some
potential high-powered Tim Taylor style returns.