LOWE’S BUILDS ON STRONG SALES STREAK
4Q results surge as people keep plowing money into homes
Lowe’s extended its strong sales streak through the holidays as customers kept investing in their homes during the pandemic.
The nation’s second largest home improvement retailer behind Home Depot reported that fourth-quarter profits almost doubled from a year ago, while sales rose 27 percent. Both results surpassed Wall Street expectations. Sales at stores opened at least a year soared nearly 29 percent, following a 30.4 percent increase in the fiscal third quarter.
The strong showing, announced Wednesday, followed results from Home Depot, which reported Tuesday that fourthquarter sales surged 25 percent. Global sales at Home Depot stores open at least a year, a key indicator of a retailer’s health, climbed 24.5 percent, and by 25 percent if only U.S. stores are counted.
Home improvement stores have become hot destinations during the pandemic with millions working from home and attending school remotely. Many
Americans have found the time to update or change their homes to add home offices and other elements.
“During the pandemic, the home has come to serve four primary purposes: a residence, a home school, a home office and a primary location for recreation and entertainment, “Marvin Ellison, Lowe’s CEO, said during the earnings call Wednesday.
Ellison told The Associated Press in a separate call Wednesday that even when the risks of the pandemic fade, there are a
number of factors that he believes will help prop up the housing market and therefore should continue to lift Lowe’s and other home improvement businesses. Mortgage rates are low. There is a shortage of homes and the housing inventory is full of old houses that need repair, he noted.
On Tuesday, the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index recorded a 10.1 percent spike in December, compared with the same month last year. That topped the 9.2 percent jump the previous month, and all other months going back almost seven years.
Lowe’s has been doing its part to drive sales and increase market share. Lowe’s held a special bath and home organization promotional event in January that Ellison says resonated with consumers. But it’s also revamped its website, tailored its stores to local markets and better catered to professional contractors. The company will also be adding special lockers — designed to store bulky products, for this group.
Against this environment, Lowe’s, based in Mooresville, N.C., reported fiscal fourth-quarter net income of $978 million, or $1.32 per share, for the quarter ended Jan. 29. That compares with $509 million, or 66 cents per share, in the year-earlier period. Earnings, adjusted for restructuring costs for the latest period, were $1.33 per share.
The average estimate of 13 analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of $1.22 per share.
The home improvement retailer posted revenue of $20.31 billion in the period, compared with $16.03 billion in the year-earlier quarter. Eight analysts surveyed by Zacks expected $19.54 billion.