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Home Depot beat first-quarter expectations Tuesday and reaffirmed full-year guidance, which sounds better than it is. Revenue came in at $41.77 billion against a $41.52 billion estimate. Adjusted EPS of $3.43 edged out the $3.41 consensus. The bar, it should be noted, had been meaningfully lowered by analysts in recent months, so clearing it deserves partial credit at best.

Home Depot is one of the cleanest mirrors the American economy has available. When people feel good, they buy houses, move in, renovate, upgrade. When they don't, they buy lightbulbs and defer the kitchen. Right now, they are very much in the lightbulb phase. Comparable sales rose just 0.6%, missing estimates and marking the third consecutive quarter the figure failed to move more than half a point in either direction. Comparable transactions fell 1.3%, the fourth straight quarterly decline. Gross margin came in below expectations. The homeowner, per CFO Richard McPhail, remains resilient but is "deferring spend on larger projects," which is executive for: people are scared and sitting on their hands.

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The housing market is the original sin. Mortgage rates were supposed to come down this year and give Home Depot the tailwind it needed. Then the Iran war sent energy prices higher, inflation reaccelerated, and mortgage rates spiked back up. The window closed before it fully opened. Without housing turnover, the big-ticket renovation cycle doesn't start, and without that cycle, Home Depot is basically selling bathroom caulk and hoping for better days.

The company's answer is to go harder after professional contractors, who already make up about 50% of revenue. The $18.25 billion SRS Distribution acquisition and last year's GMS deal are both aimed at the $700 billion pro market. McPhail said Tuesday that Home Depot has "a right to win" that market but "doesn't quite have the ability yet." Admirable honesty from the CFO of the world's largest home improvement retailer… or a concerning one.