The Home Depot, Inc. (NYSE:HD ) Q2 2025 Earnings Conference Call August 19, 2025 9:00 AM ET Company Participants L - Corporate Participant e - Corporate Participant s - Corporate Participant a - Corporate Participant R - Corporate Participant h - Corporate Participant e - Corporate Participant v - Corporate Participant Ann-Marie Campbell - Senior Executive Vice President Edward P. Decker - Chairman, President & CEO Isabel Janci - VP of Investor Relations & Treasurer Richard V.
Homeowners may have reason to be more comfortable financing renovations, but Home Depot isn't counting on a shift in their mindset.
The nation's largest home improvement chain said during an earnings call on Tuesday that pricing changes would affect specific product categories.
Investors are bracing themselves for weak earnings reports from many of the bellwether retail stocks reporting earnings this week. That may explain why investors are mildly bullish on Home Depot NYSE: HD after a better-than-feared earnings report.
A primary reason for the underperformance is the broader operating environment, which remains a difficult one for these home improvement chains.
HD's Q2 earnings and sales miss estimates, but year-over-year growth and reaffirmed 2025 guidance highlight resilience.
Do-it-yourself (DIY) homeowners may think they're the prime Home Depot customers, but the company's growth story is being built around a different vertical: the professional builder. Home Depot told investors during a Tuesday (Aug.
Home Depot said tariffs will soon start hitting some price tags even as consumers continue to hold off on larger projects because of higher interest rates and economic uncertainty.
Shares of Home Depot Inc (NYSE:HD) are higher this morning, even after the retail brand reported lower-than-expected second-quarter results, with earnings of $4.68 per share on revenue of $45.28 billion dollars.
Home Depot could see “some modest price movement” after previously saying they would not raise prices due to tariffs, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday, as the retailer missed estimates for earnings and revenue—a possible indication consumers are spending less, which will become clearer this week after other big box retailers like Lowe's, Target, and Walmart also report earnings.
Home Depot's sales improved during its fiscal second quarter as consumers remained focused on smaller projects amid cost concerns and economic uncertainty, but its performance missed Wall Street's expectations.Revenue for the three months ended August 3 climbed to $45.28 billion from $43.18 billion, but fell short of the $45.41 billion that analysts polled by FactSet were looking for.Sales at stores open at least a year, a key indicator of a retailer's health, rose 1%. In the U.S., comparable store sales increased 1.4%.Customer transactions declined less than 1% in the quarter.