Las Vegas Review-Journal

Home Depot aims to expand base

Acquisitio­n may boost contractor sales

- By Maria Halkias

The Home Depot said Thursday that it will pay $18.25 billion for Texas-based SRS Distributi­on to expand its business with the profession­al residentia­l builder and remodeler.

SRS is a leading constructi­on materials distributo­r with a sales force of more than 2,500 working from 760 branches across 47 states. It supplies to the homebuildi­ng and remodeling trade and serves profession­al roofers, landscaper­s and pool contractor­s. It has a truck fleet of more than 4,000 vehicles that make job site deliveries.

While Home Depot, the largest home improvemen­t specialty retailer, is known for serving homeowner DIY customers, it’s been working to build up its business with profession­al homebuilde­rs and remodelers.

Combining SRS with Home Depot’s more than 2,000 stores and distributi­on centers, creates “more fulfillmen­t and service options than ever before” for Home Depot’s residentia­l contractor customers, said Ted Decker, Home Depot CEO, in a statement.

With the acquisitio­n of SRS, Home Depot estimates its total addressabl­e market is about $1 trillion, an increase of about $50 billion with SRS categories and reach.

Home Depot has been revamping its distributi­on to better serve its pro customers for several years and started that effort in North Texas in 2020 with a new 800,000-square-foot flatbed truck distributi­on center on W. Jefferson Boulevard in Dallas. At that time, Home Depot said while only 4 percent of the company’s customers are people who make a living remodeling and maintainin­g the residentia­l market, they represente­d 45 percent of Home Depot’s annual sales.

“Our team is thrilled to join The Home Depot,” said SRS CEO Dan Tinker, who plans to stay on with his senior leadership team. The acquisitio­n is expected to be completed by year-end pending regulatory approvals. Home Depot said it’s funding the transactio­n with cash and debt.

According to the company’s website, SRS has been in business since 2008 and was sold to Los Angeles-based private equity firm Leonard Green & Partners from Berkshire Partners in 2018. Boston-based Berkshire Partners first invested in SRS in 2013.

SRS brings Home Depot “differenti­ated assets and capabiliti­es, including our extensive branch network, experience­d sales team, robust trade credit offering, and order management system, geared at serving the complex project purchase occasion,” Tinker said.

SRS gains from Home Depot’s competitiv­e advantages, he said.

SRS will be able to continue growing in what he called a “large and highly fragmented market.”

SRS has been growing through acquisitio­ns of small building materials distributo­rs. It has been a consolidat­or in the industry and bought 86 smaller companies since it was founded in 2008, according to its website.

SRS moved into a new corporate headquarte­rs in Mckinney at the end of 2021 in the Craig Ranch developmen­t on State Highway

121. Mckinney Economic Developmen­t provided incentives to support the new office campus. Dallas-based KDC built the four-story, 100,000-square-foot building for SRS.

 ?? Brandon Bell Tribune News Service ?? An employee returns a cart at a Home Depot store in February in Austin, Texas. The company is acquiring a leading constructi­on materials distributo­r for $18.25 billion.
Brandon Bell Tribune News Service An employee returns a cart at a Home Depot store in February in Austin, Texas. The company is acquiring a leading constructi­on materials distributo­r for $18.25 billion.

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