Overview:

Home Depot's $41.77 billion in Q1 sales — up nearly 5% year-over-year — beat the Street's $41.54 billion estimate, offering a rare positive signal for the consumer discretionary sector. S&P 500 futures are off 0.4% and 10-year yields are anchored near 4.6% as traders assess whether Home Depot's guidance lift can hold against a backdrop of still-elevated rates and a 40% implied probability of another Fed hike. New Residential Construction data released at 8:30 AM ET and Pending Home Sales at 10:0

NEW YORK — Home Depot handed the market a beat it needed but may not be able to use, posting adjusted earnings of $3.43 per share on $41.77 billion in quarterly sales — clearing consensus estimates even as S&P 500 futures slid 0.4% and the 10-year Treasury yield sat stubbornly near 4.6%.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this: Home Depot’s beat is real, but the tape may not reward it. When yields are anchored near 4.6% and the implied probability of another Fed hike has crept to 40%, even a clean earnings beat struggles to sustain a rally past the first thirty minutes. I’m watching the $41.54B revenue line carefully — not because the company missed it, but because guidance held. The real question here is whether housing demand is recovering or whether homeowners are just spending on repairs because they’re locked into mortgages they can’t refinance. That distinction matters enormously for where HD trades in Q3. Watch this: if Toll Brothers delivers revenue above $2.42 billion this afternoon, the read on housing shifts from anecdotal to confirmed. A miss, on the other hand, would expose Home Depot’s beat as a one-quarter anomaly.

What the Data Actually Showed

Home Depot’s Q1 fiscal 2026 results came in at $41.77 billion in net sales — nearly 5% above the $39.86 billion recorded a year earlier and ahead of the Street’s $41.54 billion estimate. Adjusted EPS of $3.43 cleared the $3.41 consensus. Net income landed at $3.29 billion, or $3.30 per share on a reported basis.

The company maintained its full-year fiscal 2026 guidance, continuing to expect sales growth between 2.5% and 4.5%, with adjusted EPS growth of as much as 4%. That’s not a raised guide — but holding guidance at these rate levels, with consumer confidence still under pressure, is a statement in itself.

Key Stat
$41.77B
Home Depot’s Q1 sales — nearly 5% above year-ago levels and ahead of the $41.54B Wall Street estimate. The beat confirms housing activity is alive; the question is whether it’s accelerating or flattering comparisons.

Two more data points land this morning. New Residential Construction for April prints at 8:30 AM ET — the first hard read on whether spring homebuilding momentum is translating into actual starts. NAR Pending Home Sales follow at 10:00 AM. Both will test whether Home Depot’s results reflect genuine sector strength or simply deferred maintenance spending from locked-in homeowners who aren’t moving anytime soon.

Data Visual
Home Depot Revenue Growth: Actual vs. Wall Street Estimate (Q1 FY2026)
Shows Home Depot’s reported sales beat relative to consensus, alongside year-over-year revenue growth context for the past five quarters.
Home Depot Revenue Growth: Actual vs. Wall Street Estimate (Q1 FY2026)
Values in $B

The Broader Tape: Yields, Dollars, and a Market That Can’t Catch a Break

The macro setup heading into Tuesday’s session is not forgiving. The 10-year Treasury yield is hovering near 4.6% — close to its highest level in more than a year — and the dollar index has crept back above 99, up 0.09% overnight. Nasdaq 100 futures are off 0.6%, with semiconductor names including Nvidia and Micron extending recent losses. WTI crude sits near $108, down 0.4% on the session.

The rate environment is where the real tension lives. Markets currently price the Fed on hold through year-end, but the implied probability of an additional 25 basis-point hike has risen to roughly 40%. That shift — quiet as it is — is doing damage across long-duration assets and rate-sensitive sectors. Moody’s recent downgrade has added a layer of sovereign credit anxiety that wasn’t priced into equities a month ago, and the bond market’s stubbornness is starting to force equity valuations into a reckoning.

The DXY’s 52-week range of 95.55 to 100.90 puts current levels near the upper end. A dollar that stays firm above 99 compresses multinational earnings estimates, which is a secondary headwind for large-cap names reporting over the next three weeks. The bond market is pressing its case, and equities haven’t fully acknowledged it yet.

Data Visual
U.S. 10-Year Treasury Yield: Rolling 5-Session Trend Into May 19
Tracks the 10-year yield over the past five sessions to show the rate pressure context traders face ahead of today’s housing data releases.
U.S. 10-Year Treasury Yield: Rolling 5-Session Trend Into May 19
Values in %

Home Depot and Toll Brothers: A Sector Under Examination

Home Depot’s result is the better-known headline, but Toll Brothers’ afternoon report may carry more interpretive weight for the sector. Analysts expect Toll to post $2.58 in EPS on $2.42 billion in revenue for its fiscal Q2. Toll serves the luxury end of the new-construction market — buyers who are less rate-sensitive but increasingly cautious about asset prices and macro stability. A miss would suggest the problem runs deeper than affordability; a beat would validate Home Depot’s implied optimism.

The analyst community is largely constructive on Home Depot. The average price target stands at $404.10, with 21 Strong Buy ratings against a single Sell. But constructive ratings don’t always survive a rate environment that’s grinding higher. Truist Securities analyst Rohit Seth maintained his Buy rating in April but cut his price target from $190 to $170 — a telling trim that reflects not a change in company view, but a change in the rate-discount framework applied to consumer discretionary names.

Analyst Note
Truist Securities’ Rohit Seth maintained a Buy rating on Home Depot in April but trimmed his price target from $190 to $170 — a 10.5% cut that signals the rate environment is repricing the stock’s fair value independent of operational performance. With the company guiding for up to 4% adjusted EPS growth in FY2026 and sales growth of 2.5%–4.5%, the bull case is intact. The bear case is simply that 4.6% on the 10-year makes that growth profile worth less than it was six months ago.

One counterpoint worth sitting with: Home Depot’s revenue growth near 5% is happening at a time when existing home sales remain historically suppressed. If rates ever decline meaningfully — freeing the roughly 60% of U.S. mortgages locked in below 4% — the pent-up transaction volume could fuel a step-change in HD’s results that no current analyst model has fully priced. The bear thesis on housing assumes stasis. That assumption has a shelf life.

What Traders Are Watching Before the Open

Three variables will shape the session from 9:30 AM forward. First, whether Housing Starts data released at 8:30 AM showed month-over-month improvement — any figure above February’s depressed levels would add credibility to Home Depot’s beat. Second, the S&P 500’s ability to hold pre-market levels as bond yields stay elevated. Third, whether semiconductor weakness in Nvidia and Micron deepens or stabilizes — that tape has its own logic right now, disconnected from the housing complex, but it will drag index-level performance regardless of what Home Depot does.

The 10:00 AM Pending Home Sales print carries the most immediate risk for the session’s second leg. A significant miss there would confirm that April’s spring selling season underperformed, stripping context from Home Depot’s revenue number and potentially reopening the debate about whether the housing recovery is real or statistical noise. The bond market’s pressure on the equity rally is not theoretical — it is visible in futures this morning.

Level / Event Value Signal
10-Year Treasury Yield ~4.60% Sustained hold above 4.6% tightens financial conditions for housing and compresses HD/TOL valuations regardless of earnings quality
S&P 500 Futures -0.4% Futures weakness ahead of housing data limits Home Depot’s ability to trade higher at the open; watch for a fade if HD gaps up
Toll Brothers EPS Estimate $2.58 A beat confirms housing sector momentum; a miss would reframe HD’s Q1 result as an outlier rather than a trend
NAR Pending Home Sales (10 AM) TBD This is the session’s key swing catalyst — a miss creates a second-leg selloff in real estate and consumer names; a beat shifts the narrative
DXY (Dollar Index) 99.08 Dollar strength near the top of its 52-week range pressures multinationals; a break above 100 would add another layer of earnings-estimate headwind

Home Depot’s morning print offers a genuine data point of strength in a tape that has been short on those recently. The company grew revenue nearly 5% in an environment where the average 30-year mortgage rate has kept transaction volumes historically low, and it held guidance without flinching. That’s operationally credible. The problem is that the market needs more than one credible data point to push through 4.6% yields and a 40% implied probability of another rate hike. The housing starts number at 8:30 AM and pending sales at 10:00 AM will either build a case for a genuine sector re-rating — or confirm that Home Depot’s beat was a single-name story in a sector still fighting the macro. Toll Brothers’ afternoon earnings will close the loop. Traders who buy the Home Depot gap without waiting for that confirmation are making a bet on sentiment, not on evidence. The evidence arrives today. Watch it arrive before committing to a direction.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...