"AI can't climb a ladder to change the batteries in your smoke detector."
That's Lowe's CEO Marvin Ellison making the case for a labor shift most investors haven't priced in yet. The company is putting $250 million behind the line.
Ellison has an MBA. He's still telling parents to think about trade school over a four-year college.
The Numbers Behind The Bet
The plan: $250 million over the next decade to find and train 250,000 skilled tradespeople - plumbers, carpenters, electricians. That's a dollar for every person, aimed straight at a pipeline the country keeps coming up short on.
The industry needs 349,000 new trade workers by the end of 2026.
Firms can't find them. A recent survey showed 92% of construction companies are hunting for qualified workers and coming up empty.
Specialty trade contractors have added just 95,000 jobs since late 2024. Not close to enough.
Why The Math Works For Workers
The story people tell about college - that the degree pays for itself - has cracks in it.
47% of skilled tradespeople out-earn the average college grad. And they do it without student loans weighing on their paycheck for 15 years.
Think of it as two runners starting a race. The trades runner starts at the line. The college runner starts $80,000 behind it.
That's a long head start to give up. It's part of why even corporate execs are reportedly pushing their own kids toward trade programs.
Why Lowe's Cares
Lowe's runs on contractors. Pros - plumbers, electricians, framers - are the customers who buy by the truckload, not the single light bulb.
When that pro customer base shrinks, so does Lowe's most valuable order book.
A $250 million spend over ten years is small next to the revenue those 250,000 tradespeople would drive through the aisles for decades. Less a charity pledge. More a long-term demand strategy.
It also fits where the broader economy is drifting. AI is replacing a chunk of white-collar tasks - emails, first drafts, basic code. It can't fix a leaking water heater or wire a new kitchen.
What To Watch
Trade-adjacent stocks are worth a closer look. Home Depot ($HD) runs the same pro playbook as Lowe's and chases the same customers.
Training and vocational education companies are another angle. The pipeline Lowe's is funding has to come through somewhere.
And watch policy. If federal or state programs start matching private investment in the trades, the labor squeeze could ease faster than expected.
A CEO with an MBA writing a $250 million check for ladder-climbers is a real signal about where labor value is heading.
