Continued strength in paint, flooring and plumbing sales and ongoing efforts to trim costs pushed Home Depot to a fiscal fourth-quarter profit, the largest US home-improvement retailer said.
The improvements led Home Depot to boost its quarterly dividend for the first time since 2006 and give a 2010 profit forecast above analysts' expectations.
Consumers cut back on home-improvement projects during the recession and housing slump, but conditions have slowly started to improve, causing more to take on big projects.
Home Depot's stock gained 17 cents to $30.49 in premarket trading.
The company, based in Atlanta, earned $US342 million ($A380.3 million), or 20 cents per share, for the quarter. Adjusted earnings were 24 cents per share, which excludes a $US163 million ($A181.25 million) writedown related to its HD Supply investment.
A year ago, Home Depot lost $US54 million ($A60.05 million), or three cents per share.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters predicted a smaller profit of 17 cents per share. Those estimates typically exclude one-time items.
Sales for the three months ended Jan 31 dipped 0.3 per cent to $US14.57 billion ($A16.2 billion). That beat Wall Street's $US14.07 billion ($A15.65 billion). Quarterly revenue also benefited from sales overseas and improving sales of kitchen and bath items.
Sales at stores open at least a year rose 1.2 per cent, an improvement from the third quarter's decline of 6.9 per cent. In the US, those sales dropped 1.1 per cent for the fourth quarter.
That figure is a key indicator of retailer performance because it measures growth at existing stores rather than newly opened ones.
Home Depot offset some of its sales weakness during the quarter with cost reductions, lowering its total operating expenses to $US4.29 billion ($A4.77 billion) from $US4.69 billion ($A5.22 billion).
Similarly, smaller rival Lowe's reported on Monday that its fourth-quarter profit rose 27 per cent on cost cuts and modestly higher sales, as demand for items such as appliances and countertops improved.
Home Depot has also downsized its business a bit, announcing in January that it was laying off 1000 staffers as it cut three pilot programs and got rid of some support positions. The job eliminations made up less than 1 per cent of Home Depot's more than 300,000 workers, and the company plans to create 200 jobs in Atlanta as part of its restructuring.
The retailer's full-year profit climbed 18 per cent to $US2.66 billion ($A2.96 billion), or $1.57 per share. Adjusted earnings were $1.66 per share for fiscal 2009.
Sales at stores open at least a year declined 6.6 per cent, with the US sales figure off 6.2 per cent.
Annual sales fell seven per cent to $US66.18 billion ($A73.59 billion) from $US71.29 billion ($A79.27 billion).
For fiscal 2010, the retailer predicts earnings from continuing operations of $1.79 per share, with sales up about 2.5 per cent. Based on 2009's revenue of $US66.18 billion ($A73.59 billion), that implies sales of $US67.85 billion ($A75.45 billion) for the year.
Analysts expect a 2010 profit of $1.73 per share on revenue of $US66.43 billion ($A73.87 billion).
Home Depot also forecast sales at stores open at least a year would rise about 2.5 per cent in 2010.
The company lifted its quarterly dividend by 5 per cent to 23.625 cents. The dividend will be paid on March 25 to shareholders of record March 11.
Home Depot had 2244 stores at quarter's end.
©2010AP