This blog is about financial analysis of Home Depot. Home Depot is an American retailer of home improvement and construction products and services.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Home Depot Company Description
Home Depot, founded in 1978, is one of the world’s largest home
improvement retailers. The company has a cyclical nature as it performs
well during economic recoveries and vice versa. It operates in four
major segments which are: Plumbing, electrical and kitchen, Hardware and
seasonal, Building materials, lumber and millwork, and Paint and
flooring. Plumbing, electrical and kitchen contributed 31% to total
revenues, which was the highest among all segments. The company serves
three types of customers: Do-it-yourself (DIY), Do-it-for-me (DIFM) and
Professional customers. Home Depot generates 89% of its revenues from US
as 88% of its total numbers of stores are located there. Read More: HD
Monday, November 11, 2013
The Home Depot Inc. (NYSE:HD) – Home Depot apologizes for racist tweet
Home improvement maker Home Depot Inc. on Thursday
apologized for a tweet that showed a picture of two African-American drummers
with a person in a gorilla mask in between them and asked: “Which drummer is
not like the others?”
The tweet, from Home Depot’s official Twitter account,
@HomeDepot, was part of a “College Gameday” college football promotion on ESPN.
It was quickly pulled, but not before people took screen shots of it and it was
widely circulated on social media. NBC and CNBC, among others, reported on the
Tweet.
The Home Depot, Inc. (HD), with a current value of $108.11B,
opened at $75.28. During the trading session, HD traded between $74.78 to
$75.71 with a one year range of $60.21 to $81.56. Read more.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Home Depot Apologizes for a Tweet That Offends
Home Depot spent much of Thursday and Friday scrambling to
apologize after a message sent from the company’s primary Twitter account,
@HomeDepot, was criticized as racially insensitive.
The message, part of a college football promotion, included
a picture of two African-American men and a person in a gorilla suit drumming
on overturned buckets, with a caption that read, “which drummer is not like the
others?” The tweet, which went out midday on Thursday, was quickly deleted.
Within hours, Home Depot apologized publicly and said it had fired the people
who sent it out.
“We have zero tolerance for anything so stupid and
offensive,” Stephen Holmes, director of corporate communications for Home
Depot, said in an email statement. “The outside agency that created the tweet
and the Home Depot associate who posted it have been terminated. Read more.
The Home Depot Inc. (NYSE:HD) – At the Open: New Records for S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrials?
Is it time to pop the champagne and celebrate new stock
market highs? The Dow Jones Industrials have risen 0.2% to 15,781.75 at 9:51
a.m.-a record high–lifted by the Home Depot (HD), which has gained 0.9%, and
General Electric (GE), which has risen 0.7%. Deutsche Bank’s Alan Ruskin
explains why the number isn’t as strong as it looks: Headline GDP 2.8%.
Looking at the stock, its one day range is $76.34 to $77.18
with a one year range of $60.21 to $81.56. HD shares are currently priced at
20.71x this year’s forecasted earnings, which makes them relatively inexpensive
compared to the industry’s 25.39x earnings multiple for the same period.
The company pays shareholders $1.56 per share annually in
dividends, yielding 2.00%. In a review of the consensus earnings estimate this
quarter, 26 sell-side analysts are looking at $0.89 per share, which would be
$0.15 better than the year-ago quarter and a $0.01 sequential increase. Read more.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Think Home Depot Is Too Big? Think Again.
Many investors don't need to be reminded of the tremendous
growth that Home Depot (NYSE: HD ) has
seen over the previous years as the company has emerged a winner following the
2008 recession. The rebound of consumer residential spending and strong housing
starts are two strong reasons why shares are up over 100% in the last two
years. Outside of favorable economic trends lies a well managed and well
positioned company that is well positioned to continue growing over the years.
Many investors are questioning if the company's growth can
continue over the coming years. From a revenue perspective, the argument can be
made that the company still has several more years of above-average growth
ahead.
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