Carpet Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Carpet stocks.

Carpet Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 14 HD S&P 500 Giant Home Depot Sees Same-Store Sales Fall For Sixth Straight Quarter
May 14 HD Home Depot's Q1 earnings signal consumer pullback
May 14 HD These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: GameStop, AMC, Home Depot, Alibaba, Plug Power, On Holding, Paysafe, and More
May 14 HD Home Depot Sales Fall Due to Late Spring, High Interest Rates
May 14 HD Stocks to Watch Tuesday: AMC, GameStop, Alibaba, Home Depot
May 14 HD Here's What Key Metrics Tell Us About Home Depot (HD) Q1 Earnings
May 14 HD Home Depot Fiscal First-Quarter Results Miss Views; Maintains Full-Year Outlook
May 14 HD Biden tariffs target China, Home Depot reports: Yahoo Finance
May 14 HD Nasdaq, S&P 500 Futures On Edge As Traders Gear Up For PPI Data, Powell's Speech: Why This Analyst Remains Hopeful Despite Market Losing Some Momentum
May 14 HD Home Depot (HD) Q1 Earnings Top Estimates
May 14 CE American Vanguard (AVD) Q1 Earnings Beat, Sales Miss Estimates
May 14 CE Innospec's (IOSP) Q1 Earnings Surpass Estimates, Sales Lag
May 14 HD Home Depot slips after warning of the delayed start to the critical spring selling season
May 14 HD Home Depot in charts: Sequential improvements seen across all key metrics in Q1
May 14 HD Home Depot's sales continue to soften in 2024 as inflation, delayed start to spring weigh on sales
May 14 HD Earnings Summary: Home Depot comparable sales fall short of expectations in Q1
May 14 HD Spending worries: Major retailer earnings to shed light on the state of the consumer
May 14 HD Home Depot (NYSE:HD) Misses Q1 Revenue Estimates
May 14 HD Home Depot sales drop more than expected as wary customers delay big projects
May 14 HD Home Depot reports mixed Q1 results; reaffirms FY24 outlook
Carpet

A carpet is a textile floor covering typically consisting of an upper layer of pile attached to a backing. The pile was traditionally made from wool, but, since the 20th century, synthetic fibers such as polypropylene, nylon or polyester are often used, as these fibers are less expensive than wool. The pile usually consists of twisted tufts which are typically heat-treated to maintain their structure. The term "carpet" is often used interchangeably with the term "rug", although the term "carpet" can be applied to a floor covering that covers an entire house, whereas a "rug" is generally no bigger than a single room, and traditionally does not even span from one wall to another, and is typically not even attached as part of the floor.
Carpets are used for a variety of purposes, including insulating a person's feet from a cold tile or concrete floor, making a room more comfortable as a place to sit on the floor (e.g., when playing with children or as a prayer rug), reducing sound from walking (particularly in apartment buildings) and adding decoration or colour to a room. Carpets can be made in any colour by using differently dyed fibers. Carpets can have many different types of patterns and motifs used to decorate the surface. In the 2000s, carpets are used in industrial and commercial establishments such as retail stores and hotels and in private homes. In the 2010s, a huge range of carpets and rugs are available at many price and quality levels, ranging from inexpensive, synthetic carpets that are mass-produced in factories and used in commercial buildings to costly hand-knotted wool rugs which are used in private homes of wealthy families.
Carpets can be produced on a loom quite similar to woven fabric, made using needle felts, knotted by hand (in oriental rugs), made with their pile injected into a backing material (called tufting), flatwoven, made by hooking wool or cotton through the meshes of a sturdy fabric or embroidered. Carpet is commonly made in widths of 12 feet (3.7 m) and 15 feet (4.6 m) in the US, 4 m and 5 m in Europe. Since the 20th century, where necessary for wall-to-wall carpet, different widths of carpet can be seamed together with a seaming iron and seam tape (formerly it was sewn together) and fixed to a floor over a cushioned underlay (pad) using nails, tack strips (known in the UK as gripper rods), adhesives, or occasionally decorative metal stair rods. Wall-to-wall carpet is distinguished from rugs or mats, which are loose-laid floor coverings, as wall-to-wall carpet is fixed to the floor and covers a much larger area.
The GoodWeave labelling scheme used throughout Europe and North America assures that child labour has not been used: importers pay for the labels, and the revenue collected is used to monitor centres of production and educate previously exploited children.

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