Home Depot Stock Shares $130 Bil Success With Investors

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Home Depot

In the last decade, Home Depot (HD) stock has returned an impressive $130 Bil back to its shareholders through cold, hard cash via dividends and buybacks. Let’s look at some numbers and compare how this payout power stacks up against the market’s biggest capital-return machines.

As it turns out, HD stock has returned the 14th highest amount to shareholders in history.

  HD S&P Median
Dividends $63 Bil $4.5 Bil
Share Repurchase $67 Bil $5.5 Bil
Total Returned $130 Bil $9.1 Bil
Total Returned as % of Current Market Cap 34.4% 25.6%

Why should you care? Because dividends and share repurchases represent direct, tangible returns of capital to shareholders. They also signal management’s confidence in the company’s financial health and ability to generate sustainable cash flows. And there are more stocks like that. Here is a list of the top 10 companies ranked by total capital returned to shareholders via dividends and stock repurchases.

Stocks can be volatile, but markets aren’t spared either – 2008, 2020. Volatility happens. See how Trefis’ Boston-based, wealth management partner‘s allocation framework handled both.

Relevant Articles
  1. Buy or Sell Home Depot Stock?
  2. Ten-Year Tally: HD Hands Back $130 Bil to Shareholders
  3. Home Depot vs. Lowe’s: Why Pay a Premium for HD Stock?
  4. A Decade of Rewards: HD Returns $130 Bil to Investors
  5. How Will Home Depot Stock React To Its Upcoming Earnings?
  6. HD Stock Up 6.3% after 6-Day Win Streak

Top 10 Stocks By Total Shareholder Return

  Total Money Returned As % Of Current Market Cap via Dividends via Share Repurchases
AAPL $847 Bil 21.0% $141 Bil $706 Bil
MSFT $364 Bil 9.5% $165 Bil $199 Bil
GOOGL $343 Bil 10.1% $12 Bil $331 Bil
XOM $212 Bil 42.8% $145 Bil $67 Bil
WFC $208 Bil 74.0% $59 Bil $150 Bil
JPM $174 Bil 20.1% $0.0 $174 Bil
META $167 Bil 10.2% $6.4 Bil $160 Bil
ORCL $161 Bil 21.6% $34 Bil $126 Bil
JNJ $157 Bil 34.4% $104 Bil $52 Bil
CVX $153 Bil 56.3% $97 Bil $55 Bil

For full ranking, visit Buybacks & Dividends Ranking

What do you notice here? The total capital returned to shareholders as a % of the current market cap appears inversely proportional to growth prospects for reinvestments. Stocks like Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) are growing much faster, in a more predictable way, compared to the others, but they have returned a much lower fraction of their market cap to shareholders.

That’s the flip side to high capital returns. Sure, they are attractive, but you have to ask yourself the question: Am I sacrificing growth and sound fundamentals? With that in mind, let’s look at some numbers for HD. (see Buy or Sell Home Depot Stock for more details)

Home Depot Fundamentals

  • Revenue Growth: 8.5% LTM and 2.2% last 3-year average.
  • Cash Generation: Nearly 8.6% free cash flow margin and 13.1% operating margin LTM.
  • Recent Revenue Shocks: The minimum annual revenue growth in the last 3 years for HD was -1.8%.
  • Valuation: Home Depot stock trades at a P/E multiple of 25.7

  HD S&P Median
Sector Consumer Discretionary
Industry Home Improvement Retail
PE Ratio 25.7 23.6

   
LTM* Revenue Growth 8.5% 5.4%
3Y Average Annual Revenue Growth 2.2% 5.2%
Min Annual Revenue Growth Last 3Y -1.8% -0.1%

   
LTM* Operating Margin 13.1% 18.7%
3Y Average Operating Margin 14.0% 18.2%
LTM* Free Cash Flow Margin 8.6% 13.3%

*LTM: Last Twelve Months

That’s a good overview, but evaluating a stock from an investment perspective involves much more. That is exactly what Trefis High Quality Portfolio does. It is designed to reduce stock-specific risk while giving upside exposure.

HD Historical Risk

Home Depot isn’t immune to big sell-offs. It fell about 52% during the Dot-Com Bubble and 54% in the Global Financial Crisis. More recent shocks like the 2018 correction and the Covid pandemic still dragged it down 25% and 38%, respectively. Inflation worries took a roughly 35% hit. Solid fundamentals matter, but these numbers show even strong stocks can take a serious hit when markets turn sour.

But the risk is not limited to major market crashes. Stocks fall even when markets are good – think events like earnings, business updates, and outlook changes. Read HD Dip Buyer Analyses to see how the stock has recovered from sharp dips in the past.

The Trefis High Quality (HQ) Portfolio, with a collection of 30 stocks, has a track record of comfortably outperforming its benchmark that includes all 3 – the S&P 500, S&P mid-cap, and Russell 2000 indices. Why is that? As a group, HQ Portfolio stocks provided better returns with less risk versus the benchmark index; less of a roller-coaster ride, as evident in HQ Portfolio performance metrics.