When your business depends on people feeling confident enough to tear apart their kitchens, a frozen housing market and anxious consumers present something of a problem. Home Depot Inc. (HD) learned this the hard way on Tuesday, slashing its full-year profit forecast after the hoped-for second-half recovery simply didn't show up.
The issue isn't that demand collapsed entirely. It just stopped moving in the right direction. "While underlying demand in the business remained relatively stable, sequentially an expected increase in demand in the third quarter did not materialize," CEO Ted Decker explained on the earnings call. Translation: they were waiting for things to pick up, and they kept waiting, and here we are.
Adding insult to injury, even the weather refused to cooperate. A surprisingly quiet storm season meant fewer emergency repairs and replacement projects, contributing to the disappointing results.
When Nobody Moves, Nobody Renovates
The company pointed directly at the housing market as a major culprit. "We believe that consumer uncertainty and continued pressure in housing are disproportionately impacting home improvement demand," Decker said, laying out the macro picture.
The dynamics are straightforward but brutal. "What we're seeing now is even less turnover. The housing activity is truly at 40 year lows as a percentage of housing stock. I think we're at 2.9% turnover," Decker detailed. When people aren't buying new homes, they aren't embarking on those immediate large-scale renovation projects that drive Home Depot's business.
The pain is particularly acute for big-ticket projects. "We continue to see softer engagement in larger discretionary projects where customers typically use financing to fund renovation project," noted Billy Bastick, Executive Vice President of Merchandising. If you need to finance your kitchen remodel, you're probably thinking twice in this environment.
Nervous Money Stays Put
Here's the kicker: it's not necessarily that consumers don't have money. They're just too spooked to spend it on discretionary upgrades. Decker explained that ongoing inflation has created a reluctance to commit to major projects.
"The economic uncertainty continues largely now due to living costs. Affordability is a word that's being used a lot. Layoffs, increased job concerns, etc. So that's why we don't see [an] uptick in that underlying storm adjusted demand in the business," the CEO said.
Home Depot isn't throwing in the towel entirely. Decker insisted the company remains competitive and is executing well. "I think the good news is the team, as I said, is executing at a very high level and we believe we're taking shareholders," he said.
But the company isn't sugarcoating the near-term outlook either. Management doesn't expect the macro environment to improve anytime soon, and they're not banking on any sudden boost to underlying demand in the coming months.
HD Price Action: Home Depot (HD) shares fell 4.46% to $342.08 as investors digested the earnings miss and dimmer outlook.