Retail

Lowe's beats on earnings and revenue, even as consumers spend less on DIY projects


An exterior view of a Lowe’s home improvement store at the Buckhorn Plaza shopping center. 

Paul Weaver | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Lowe’s topped Wall Street’s quarterly earnings and revenue expectations on Tuesday, even as do-it-yourself customers bought fewer pricey items.

The home improvement retailer’s results echoed those of Home Depot last week. Home Depot missed revenue expectations, which it attributed to a tougher housing market and a delayed start to spring.

Lowe’s stuck by its full-year forecast. It said it expects total sales of between $84 billion and $85 billion, which would be a drop from $86.38 billion in fiscal 2023. It anticipates comparable sales will decline between 2% and 3% compared with the prior year, and expects earnings per share of approximately $12 to $12.30.

Here’s what the company reported for the fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: $3.06 vs. $2.94 expected
  • Revenue: $21.36 billion vs. $21.12 billion expected

In the three-month period that ended May 3, Lowe’s net income fell to $1.76 billion, or $3.06 per share, compared with $2.26 billion, or $3.77 per share, a year earlier.

Sales dropped from $22.35 billion in the year-ago period. It marked the fifth quarter in a row that Lowe’s posted a year-over-year sales decline.

Compared to Home Depot, Lowe’s draws less of its business from painters, contractors and other home professionals that tend to provide steadier business even when do-it-yourself customers pull back. Roughly half of Home Depot’s sales come from pros compared to about 20% to 25% at Lowe’s.

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Yet Lowe’s has been trying to win business from more of those pros. In the company’s news release, CEO Marvin Ellison said gains with pros and online sales growth helped to partially offset a decline in do-it-yourself spending.

Lowe’s is lapping a year-ago quarter when the company slashed its full-year outlook and posted a year-over-year sales decline. At the time, Ellison warned investors that the retailer expected “a pullback in discretionary consumer spending over the near term.”

For each of the three quarters since then, Lowe’s sales have also dropped from the year-ago periods.

Shares of Lowe’s closed Monday at $229.17, bringing the company’s market value to $131.13 billion. As of Monday’s close, the company’s stock is up nearly 3% this year, trailing the 11% gains of the S&P 500.

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