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Home Depot tops Street; breach costs remain hazy

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ATLANTA – Home Depot’s third-quarter profit rose 14 percent as comparable-store sales climbed in the United States, suggesting a huge data breach announced two months ago has not shaken the faith of its customers.

The nation’s biggest home improvement retailer stuck to its outlook for all of 2014, but said it could not account for all possible losses from a data breach it revealed in September that affected 56 million debit and credit cards. For now, the company is putting those costs at $28 million pretax for the most recent quarter, and $34 million as it pertains to its guidance for 2014.

Shares slipped less than 1 percent before the opening bell Tuesday.

Home Depot earned $1.54 billion, or $1.15 per share, for the three months ended Nov. 2. That compares with $1.35 billion, or 95 cents per share, a year earlier.

The housing sector was hit hard early in the year by bad weather and tight conditions in the market because of rising mortgage rates and a tight supply of homes. That dragged down the earnings of home improvement retailers, yet Home Depot appears to be distancing itself from those early rough months, beating Wall Street’s per-share expectations by a couple cents, according to a poll of analysts by Zacks Investment Research.

“While we think the stock reaction will be relatively muted today, any significant weakness would make an even better buying opportunity as we remain comfortable in the longer term housing recovery thesis,” wrote Citigroup analyst Kate McShane.

Revenue for the Atlanta company climbed 5 percent to $20.52 billion from $19.47 billion. That also beat the $20.42 billion in revenue analysts had expected.

Sales at stores open at least a year rose 5.2 percent. In the United States, the figure increased 5.8 percent.

Home Depot maintained its forecast for fiscal 2014 earnings of about $4.54 per share. It still expects sales to climb approximately 4.8 percent.

Analysts polled by FactSet predict full-year earnings of $4.51 per share.

Home Depot said going forward, costs related to its data breach may include liabilities to payment card networks for reimbursements of credit card fraud and card reissuance costs; liabilities from current and future civil litigation, governmental investigations and enforcement proceedings and other potential costs.

Those costs may have a material adverse effect on its fourth-quarter results, as well as on future periods, the company said.

Home Depot Inc. has 2,266 stores in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, 10 Canadian provinces and Mexico.

Rival Lowe’s Cos. reports its quarterly results today.

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