Todd Sullivan

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If I am being honest, I would have thought this number would have been much worse... Lowe's (LOW), #2 behind Home Depot (HD) reported quarterly earnings came to $607 million, or 41 cents a diluted share, compared with $739 million, or 48 cents a share, a year earlier, a 14% decrease. Net sales dipped 1.3% to $12 billion, with same-store sales falling 8.4%. (See Call Transcript.)

In February, Lowe's projected earnings of 38 cents to 42 cents a share, 2% revenue growth and same-store sales down 5% to 7%.

"The challenging sales environment we have been experiencing for the past six quarters continued into the first quarter of 2008, and increasing financial pressures on consumers resulted in top-line sales that fell below our plan," commented Robert A. Niblock, Lowe's chairman and CEO. "The generally poor economic outlook, including well-known housing pressures, rising food and fuel prices and a more negative employment picture eroded consumer confidence and impacted discretionary purchases for the home."


I do not think anyone expected good results. These are poor but, here is the key: "With our offering of great products and exceptional service, Lowe's continued to gain market share in the quarter, and diligent expense control helped us achieve respectable earnings in spite of the headwinds facing the industry," Niblock said

"Continuing to gain market share". Housing will eventually turn and Lowe's is positioning itself through superior service and sensible balance sheet management to be ready to capitalize when it happens. Results will begin to look "less bad" as easier comps begin to come around this summer and into the fall and we will begin to get more of an apples to apples comparison for earnings based on housing levels.

Lowe's is getting a larger piece of a smaller pie. When that pie expands (it will), its piece will grow in excess of Home Depot's who inexplicably is still struggling with service issues and the hangover of promises made and not kept.

I have posted on Lowe's a few times as to its attractiveness. It continues to be the one I would choose in the category.

Here are Q2's expectations:
Second Quarter 2008 (comparisons to second quarter 2007)
  • The company expects to open approximately 23 new stores reflecting square footage growth of approximately 11 percent;
  • Total sales are expected to increase approximately 1 percent;
  • The company expects comparable store sales to decline 6 to 8 percent;
  • Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) margin is expected to decline approximately 190 basis points driven by payroll, fixed costs, depreciation and gross margin;
  • Store opening costs are expected to be approximately $22 million;
  • Diluted earnings per share of $0.54 to $0.59 are expected;
  • Lowe's second quarter ends on August 1, 2008 with operating results to be publicly released on Monday, August 18, 2008.

I will let this quarter play out before making a decision. Should the company hit the goals, I probably will be a buyer.

Disclosure: No position.

This article has 4 comments:

  •  
    Disagree.

    See our comment on this article here:
    seekingalpha.com/artic...

    CrossProfit
    Reply
  •  
    May 20 07:28 PM
    Also disagree. Upgrading one's home during the housing boom allowed one to sell for more, but how does upgrading add value when housing prices keep on falling? I'm in the camp that thinks housing won't turn for another 2-3 years minimum, so I'm staying far away from Lowe's, HD, etc.
    Reply
  •  
    May 20 09:36 PM
    What goes down must go up. That's the limit of insight from todays "intelligent analyst".

    America has 19 million abandoned homes. These homes are protected by fire departments and police forces. They have Schools and mini malls.

    The whole idea that housing has to turn around is idiotic beyond belief. America has 141 sq ft of retail space for every man, women, child and illegal alien in the country. We have more living space per capita than the third world has PER FAMILY.

    Our local Home Depot open one checkout on a saturday afternoon.

    Housing will not rebound again in our lifetime.

    Reply
  •  
    May 28 10:53 AM
    When you look at the options in the home improvement sector, Lowes seems to be ready to excel even in a very tough market. HD is closing stores, lowering expectations and going down hard. HD has not changed it way of doing business. It seems to me the Lowe's has changed and will overcome the ugly housing market.
    Reply