New York, May 30, 2026, 14:03 (EDT)
Home Depot shares slipped 1.27% to $317.14 on Friday even as the S&P 500 and Dow rose, leaving the home-improvement retailer with a modest 1.3% gain for a Memorial Day-shortened trading week. NYSE listed Monday, May 25, as a 2026 market holiday.
The move matters now because investors are still trying to decide whether the stock’s post-earnings rebound has legs, or whether housing remains too heavy a drag. Freddie Mac said the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 6.53% as of May 28, a level that keeps financing expensive for homebuyers and remodelers.
The next test may come from the macro calendar, not from Atlanta. U.S. jobs data and ISM manufacturing and services surveys are due in the week starting June 1; ISM surveys are monthly gauges of business activity, where weaker readings can point to slower demand.
Home Depot’s last company update gave both sides something to trade. First-quarter sales rose 4.8% to $41.8 billion, while comparable sales — sales from stores and digital channels open long enough to compare with a year earlier — rose 0.6%. Adjusted earnings per share fell to $3.43 from $3.56, and the company reaffirmed fiscal 2026 guidance for total sales growth of 2.5% to 4.5% and comparable sales from flat to up 2%.
Chief Executive Ted Decker said the quarter was in line with expectations, but cited “consumer uncertainty and housing affordability pressure.” That is the core issue for the stock: Home Depot can sell spring goods, tools and supplies, but the big remodel cycle is still not clean. Home Depot Investor Relations
Decker told analysts that the customer looked “reasonably” healthy, Reuters reported, but said uncertainty was “holding them back” from large projects. The company also said fuel costs were pressuring transportation and input expenses, though tariff refunds could offset part of that hit. Reuters
The operating detail was mixed. Merchandising chief Billy Bastek said Home Depot’s average ticket rose 2.2% and comparable transactions fell 1.3%, while big-ticket transactions over $1,000 rose 0.8%. Larger discretionary projects “remain under pressure,” the company transcript showed, while Pro customers outperformed do-it-yourself shoppers and online comparable sales rose more than 10%. Home Depot Investor Relations
Lowe’s, the closest listed peer, showed a similar spring picture. It reported first-quarter sales of $23.1 billion, comparable sales up 0.6%, and reaffirmed its full-year outlook; CEO Marvin Ellison credited “strong spring execution” and momentum in Pro, appliances, online and home services. Lowe’s Corporate
Wall Street has not walked away from Home Depot, but the tone is more guarded. MarketScreener showed a 36-analyst mean consensus of “Outperform” and an average target price of $370.21, while also listing a string of May 20 target cuts from firms including UBS, Truist, RBC, Morgan Stanley and TD Cowen. MarketScreener
The risk is that the housing pause lasts longer than management’s guidance allows. If mortgage rates stay high, fuel costs bite and consumers keep delaying large projects, Pro strength and seasonal sales may not be enough to carry the full year.
For the week ahead, the stock’s story is simple and not especially comfortable. Home Depot needs economic data that keeps households employed without pushing borrowing costs higher. Anything else leaves investors back where they were Friday: watching a quality retailer trade like a housing bet.