Is The Home Depot Inc. (HD) Stock Undervalued or Overvalued?

Trailing-twelve-month multiples vs Consumer Discretionary sector peers in our coverage

Insufficient Data TTM fundamentals · sector averages from covered peers

We don’t have enough peer data to compute a reliable sector comparison for HD right now.

HD has negative trailing-twelve-month earnings, so a P/E ratio isn't meaningful — we compare on price-to-sales instead.

The Numbers

P/E (TTM)

Sector avg: 149.4×

P/S (TTM)

Sector avg: 7.2×

Market Cap

$349.08B

EPS (TTM): —

Revenue (TTM)

Net income: —

Consumer Discretionary Peer Comparison

How HD's multiples stack up against sector peers we cover. Click any peer for its own valuation breakdown.

Stock Price P/E (TTM)
HD This page $350.65
AMZN $244.20 34.1×
TSLA $419.67 388.6×
NKE $43.32 25.5×

Is the Multiple Justified?

July 6, 2026

The Home Depot Inc. currently has negative TTM earnings, rendering a P/E multiple inapplicable. The company reported Q1 fiscal 2026 net sales growth of 4.8% to $41.8 billion, with comparable sales increasing 0.6%. However, net earnings and adjusted diluted EPS for Q1 fiscal 2026 were lower than the prior year. The decline in earnings reflects ongoing consumer uncertainty and housing affordability pressures impacting the consumer discretionary sector. Despite these headwinds, Home Depot is focused on its "Pro" strategy and building-material distribution, which contributed significantly to recent sales. The company has reaffirmed its fiscal 2026 guidance for sales growth and expects diluted EPS to be flat to up 4%. The absence of a positive P/E ratio highlights the current earnings challenges.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is HD overvalued or undervalued?
We don't have enough peer data to compute a sector comparison for HD right now.
What does the P/E ratio tell you?
Price-to-earnings compares a company's share price with its per-share profits. A higher multiple means investors pay more per dollar of earnings — often for faster expected growth — while a lower one can signal slower growth or higher perceived risk.
Why compare against the sector average?
Valuation multiples vary structurally between industries — software typically trades richer than banks or energy. Comparing HD with its own Consumer Discretionary peers is more informative than comparing against the whole market.
Is a cheap stock automatically a good buy?
No. A discount can be justified by weak growth or elevated risk (a "value trap"), and a premium can be earned by quality and consistency. Valuation is one input — pair it with the fundamentals and the AI context on this page.

Methodology

Multiples are computed from trailing-twelve-month fundamentals (from company filings) and the latest share price: P/E is price ÷ diluted EPS, and P/S is market cap ÷ revenue. Sector averages use the Consumer Discretionary names in our 50-stock coverage with positive earnings — a deliberately like-for-like, if imperfect, benchmark.

Stocks with negative trailing earnings are compared on price-to-sales instead. Multiples update with prices and fundamentals; AI context refreshes weekly.

Not Financial Advice

This page is for education and information only. Indicators are mechanical calculations, AI commentary can contain errors, and nothing here is a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Do your own research and consider consulting a qualified financial advisor. See our full disclaimer.

Keep Digging on HD

Same question, Consumer Discretionary peers