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This Week's Exclusive News
Lowe's Finds Support at $215 After Q1 Earnings Sell-OffBy Thomas Hughes. Article Published: 5/22/2026. 
Key Points
- Lowe's stock price decline is over; what comes next includes capital returns and eventual price recovery.
- Cash flow enables balance sheet improvements and capital returns in 2026: share buybacks are a catalyst for future quarters.
- Analysts set the floor for this market and indicate a 20% upside potential.
- Special Report: Elon Musk’s $1 Quadrillion AI IPO
While Lowe’s Corporation (NYSE: LOW) and competitors like Home Depot (NYSE: HD) face headwinds and hurdles in 2026, the technical setup is shaping up for a rebound in the back half of the year. While Q1 earnings results were solid, soft guidance led to post-release weakness, which is the operative factor. The post-release weakness in LOW shares pushed the price below $215 and triggered a strong response. The response was buying. Whether it came from bottom-fishers, value investors, or income seekers does not matter. What matters is that support was confirmed at a level that has been in play for years.
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First reached in the wake of the COVID-19 scare and subsequent market surge, $215 is now a critical pivot point for this market. The question now is whether Lowe’s can sustain its business and grow from 2026 levels, or whether it is facing contraction. The likely outcome, based on store-count growth and positive Q1 comps, is that Lowe’s can continue to grow from this level, generating ample cash flow and paying investors along the way. Growth is unlikely to be robust, but there is always hope that the housing market thaws. For now, Lowe’s growth is centered on market share gains, digital initiatives, and its pro segment. Lowe’s Outperforms in Q1: Cautious Guidance Overshadowed Financial StrengthLowe’s had a decent Q1, with revenue of $23.10, up 10.4%. The growth was driven in large part by the FBM acquisition, but organic strength was also evident. Comps increased by 0.6%, supported by growth pillars including Home Services, Pro, and appliances. Digital was also a major contributor, rising 15.5% as consumers continue to lean into same-day delivery and pickup. The company’s efforts to improve fulfillment, marketing, and the customer experience are paying off. Margin news was also favorable. The company experienced margin pressures, but less than expected, leaving gross, operating, and net profit above consensus forecasts. Adjusted earnings outpaced consensus by approximately 200 bps, exceeding top-line strength by 100 bps, and helped accelerate balance sheet improvement. Balance sheet highlights continue to reflect a high-debt position resulting from aggressive share count reduction, but progress was recorded, including increases in retained earnings and equity. Catalysts for the share price include the company’s cash flow and potential to reduce debt in the coming quarters. The downside is that share buybacks have been put on hold; the upside is that debt reduction will enable future, sustainable buybacks and improve shareholder leverage. Until then, the dividend remains reliable. Lowe’s is a Dividend King, has increased its payout for more than 60 years, and pays out less than 40% of its annualized earnings forecast. The distribution growth rate may moderate in the coming years, but dividend increases are not expected to end anytime soon. Analysts Set Floor for Lowe’s Stock: Aligns With Technical SupportAnalysts’ trends have contributed to Lowe’s stock price decline in 2025 and 2026, as they have steadily reduced price targets over that period. However, the post-release activity suggests that trend may be ending. The first revisions to emerge include reaffirmed ratings and price targets that align with a bullish consensus. MarketBeat tracks 35 analysts rating Lowe’s as a consensus Moderate Buy; they have a 63% Buy-side bias and see the stock advancing 20% from the critical support target. Looking ahead, forward earnings forecasts suggest this stock can rise by 100% within the next five to 10 years. Institutions present a risk, but that may be passing given the stock price action. Institutional investors own 75% of Lowe’s stock and sold on balance in early Q2. If that continues, Lowe’s stock will struggle to recover from its floor. The offsetting detail is the trailing 12-month balance, which is greater than $2-to-$1 in favor of bulls. With this in play, the likely outcome is that early Q2 sellers revert to buying, and institutional activity underpins the late May price action. Late May price action is more bullish than it appears. The guidance update triggered a sell-off, but the floor was reached, an intraday rebound followed, and a doji candle formed. The doji is a sign of indecision and, in this case, marks the end of a downtrend, though not necessarily an immediate rebound. 
The market remains below its moving averages, which are the first hurdle for price action. No sustained rally will form until these levels are crossed and confirmed as support. |