
Home Depot doesn't expect to raise prices because of tariffs,
saying it has spent years diversifying the sources for the goods
on its shelves.
Billy Bastek, executive vice president of merchandising, said
during a conference call on Tuesday that Home Depot's suppliers
have shifted sourcing across several countries and that the
company doesn't expect any single country outside of the U.S.
will represent more than 10% of its purchases 12 months from
now.
“We don’t see broad-based price increases for our customers at
all going forward,” he said.
Other companies, domestic and foreign, have warned customers
that price hikes are on the way due to a trade war kicked off by
the U.S.
Walmart said last week that it has already raised prices and
will have to do so again in the near future. Late Monday, Subaru
of America said it would raise prices on some of its most
popular models by as much as $2,000.
President Donald Trump lambasted Walmart, saying on social media
over the weekend that the retail giant should “eat” the
additional costs created by his tariffs.
As Trump has jacked up import taxes, he has tried to assure a
skeptical public that foreign producers would pay for those
taxes and that retailers and automakers would absorb the
additional expenses. Most economists are deeply skeptical of
those claims and have warned that the trade penalties would
worsen inflation.
Tariffs on materials like lumber are also a concern for both
homebuilders and home buyers. A homebuyer now needs to earn at
least $114,000 a year to afford a $431,250 home -- the national
median listing price in April, according to data released this
month by Realtor.com
Additional housing material costs would put home ownership out
of reach for more potential buyers, though Home Depot is
somewhat insulated as it sources the majority of its lumber in
the U.S.
Early last year, the company said that about 17% of its wood is
sourced from Canada. The company would not say whether those
import levels have changed, though after negotiations, Canadian
lumber was exempted from additional 25% U.S. tariffs.
During the first quarter, Home Depot’s revenue climbed as
customers spent slightly more on smaller home projects.
A number of U.S. companies have lowered or pulled financial
guidance for investors as tariffs launched by the Trump
administration scramble world trade but on Tuesday, Home Depot
stuck by earlier projections of sales growth at around 2.8%.
Shares of the Atlanta company dipped slightly on Tuesday.
Revenue rose to $39.86 billion from $36.42 billion a year
earlier, beating the $39.3 billion that analysts polled by
FactSet expected.
Sales at stores open at least a year, a key gauge of a
retailer’s health, edged down 0.3%. In the U.S., comparable
store sales climbed 0.2%.
Wall Street anticipated a 0.1% decline in same-store sales.
Customer transactions rose 2.1% in the quarter. The amount
shoppers spent climbed to $90.71 per average ticket from $90.68
in the prior-year period.
“Our first quarter results were in line with our expectations as
we saw continued customer engagement across smaller projects and
in our spring events,” Home Depot Chair and CEO Ted Decker said
in a statement.
Home improvement retailers like Home Depot have been dealing
with homeowners putting off bigger projects because of increased
borrowing costs and lingering concerns about inflation.
The U.S. housing market has been in a sales slump dating back to
2022, when mortgage rates began to climb from pandemic-era lows.
Sales of previously occupied homes have dropped as elevated
mortgage rates and rising prices discouraged home shoppers.
Existing home sales fell 5.9% in March from February to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.02 million units, the
National Association of Realtors said. The March sales decline
was the largest monthly drop since November 2022 and marks the
slowest sales pace for the month of March going back to 2009.
Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes fell last year to their
lowest level in nearly 30 years.
“One of the central problems for Home Depot is the skittish
housing market,” Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData,
said in a statement. “While last quarter was robust, home sales
declined by 3.1% year-over-year this quarter as consumers were
deterred from moving by continued high interest rates and
growing economic uncertainty. This lack of recovery makes it
difficult to drive home improvement spending.”
For the three months ended May 4, Home Depot Inc. earned $3.43
billion, or $3.45 per share. A year earlier the Atlanta-based
company earned $3.6 billion, or $3.63 per share.
Stripping out certain items, earnings were $3.56 per share. Wall
Street was calling for earnings of $3.60 per share.
Source:
kpic.com