Home Depot Letting the Online Game Come to It
Home Depot (HD Quote), the bolts-to-nuts home-improvement retailer, soon will roll out its much-anticipated e-commerce unit.
While the company isn't saying much, except to confirm that it will launch e-commerce efforts in the Las Vegas market next month, analysts already are buzzing about the site, which they say will offer all of the 40,000-plus products available in the typical Home Depot store, along with a range of delivery options. The e-commerce push likely won't goose Home Depot's stock, which is 29% off its highs amid fears that the economy is slowing. And the entire online home-improvement market -- worth only about $100 million this year, according to Jupiter Communications -- is a mere pittance compared with Home Depot's $38 billion in sales last year. Yet the launch demonstrates the company's dedication to being wherever its customers want to shop. Moreover, Home Depot is signaling that it intends to create an e-commerce presence without spending too much or incurring the steep losses that have weighed on other retailers.Contentment
At first glance, Atlanta-based Home Depot appears to be an e-commerce laggard. Until now, it has gone the content route with its Web site, offering company information, calculators to estimate supply needs, and a bunch of project information. For example, someone wanting to install a ceiling fan can obtain a how-to diagram, a list of necessary materials and tools, and a skill-level rating (a high rating suggests it's best left to the Bob Vilas of the world).| Stock at a Glance Home Depot (HD:NYSE) | |
| Recent Price | 48 7/8 |
| 52-week high | 70 |
| 52-week low | 35 3/4 |
| 52-week change | +22% |
| Market cap | $115 billion |
| Source: Company, Yahoo! Finance. | |
Synergies
Here's how it will work, according to Bonnie Tonneson, analyst with Chase H&Q: The company will use ZIP codes to provide customers with an up-to-date picture of the merchandise available at their local stores. That way, customers will have the option to pick up orders at the store, take same-day delivery at home, or get the order through the mail. (Tonneson rates Home Depot shares a buy, and Chase hasn't done recent underwriting for the company.) Because all the inventory comes from the stores themselves, there's no need for the sort of warehouse model used by other e-tailers. That saves money. Returns are easier, and store managers don't get testy about Web purchases eating into their own sales figures. And because sales are made through local stores, incremental Web sales will boost monthly same-store sales, making the whole company look good -- not just its Web unit.| Company at a Glance Home Depot (HD:NYSE) | ||
| Year ended Dec. 31 | Figure | Change on year-ago |
| Revenue | $38.4 billion | +27% |
| Net income | $2.32 billion | +44% |
| EPS (diluted) | $1.00 | +41% |
| Source: Company, Yahoo! Finance. | ||
Competitors
There already are some Internet start-ups jockeying to gain loyalty among do-it-yourselfers. Evanston, Ill.-based OurHouse.com sells products -- some in tandem with marketing partner Ace Hardware, which also owns 20% of the company -- but also features services such as gardening, appliance installation and contracting. CEO and founder Philip Airey says Home Depot's entrance will add legitimacy -- and a larger audience -- to the category, but maintains that its slightly different focus keeps the two distinct. Meantime, privately held CornerHardware.com, backed by investors including Homestore.com, now has 35,000 items available, and says that by the end of this year, that will jump to 200,000. Fulfillment is handled through outside distributors, and for now, the company says it is sticking with the virtual model. Richard Takata, chairman, CEO, and co-founder of the San Francisco-based company, says CornerHardware.com also is focusing on women. Nevertheless, Home Depot is "obviously going to become a viable competitor," says Takata. In Home Depot's case, late may be plenty good enough.- Loading Comments...
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