Home Depot’s Earnings Rise on Solid Sales
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Home Depot Inc., the nation’s largest home-improvement chain, said Tuesday that its fiscal fourth-quarter net income jumped 9.5% on solid sales growth.
The results met Wall Street expectations, but Home Depot shares slumped amid a broad market sell-off, losing $1.74 to $40.28 on the New York Stock Exchange.
The stock is down 5.8% this year but is still nearly double its five-year low of around $21 reached in early 2003.
For the three months ended Jan. 30, Home Depot said it earned $1.04 billion, or 47 cents a share, compared with a profit of $951 million, or 42 cents, a year earlier.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson First Call had expected earnings of 47 cents a share.
Revenue rose 11% to $16.8 billion.
Same-store sales, a measure of revenue at stores open at least a year, rose 4.6% for the quarter and 5.4% for the year. The increase for the year was the company’s largest since 1999.
For the latest fiscal year, Home Depot earned $5 billion, or $2.26 a share, compared with $4.3 billion, or $1.88, the year before. Revenue rose 13% to $73.1 billion.
Under Chief Executive Bob Nardelli, Home Depot has spent $1 billion to remodel older stores and is adding higher-priced items such as Maytag appliances.
Nardelli is preparing for a slowdown in U.S. sales by adding stores in Canada and Mexico, analysts said.
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