fair.png
Saturday March 25th, 2023 7:59PM

Target's 3Q profit drops 52% as shoppers force discounts

By The Associated Press
Related Articles
  Contact Editor

NEW YORK (AP) — An unexpected and potentially ominous pullback in customer spending ahead of the holiday shopping season pushed third quarter profits at Target down 52% after it was forced to slash prices for Americans who are feeling the squeeze of inflation.

The Minneapolis retailer voiced caution about its sales and profit during the fourth quarter because of what its seen from its customers in recent weeks.

Target also said that will be slashing expenses with a goal of saving $2 billion to $3 billion over the next three years. Those cost cuts will not include layoffs or hiring freezes, executives said.

Sales weakened significantly in the weeks leading up to Oct. 29, the end of the most recent quarter, with more customers refusing to pay full price and waiting for sales, said Chairman and CEO Brian Cornell. They’re also buying smaller packages and trading down to instore brands. That trend pushed quarterly profit far below the expectations of both Target, and Wall Street.

Shares of Target Corp. slid 14% before the opening bell and it dragged down other major retailers as well. Macy’s and Kohl’s fell 3% to 5%. Even Walmart, which topped profit expectations and raised it expectations for the year when it posted quarterly earns Tuesday, fell 2%.

“It’s an environment where consumers have been stressed," Cornell said. ”We know they are spending more dollars on food and beverage and household essentials. And as they are shopping for discretionary categories ... they are looking for that great deal."

Cornell said that mindset will continue through the holiday shopping season.

Target has taken a bigger hit than its rival Walmart and the disappointing performance comes after a streak of stellar quarterly profit and sales results.

The disappointing quarter follows Target’s nearly 90% tumble in profit in second quarter and a 52% drop in the first. In early June, Target warned that it was canceling orders from suppliers and aggressively cutting prices because of a pronounced spending shift by Americans as the pandemic eased.

Retailers were blindsided by the lightening-fast shift by consumers from spending on things like TVs and small kitchen appliances, to dinners out, movies and vacations. Adding to that shift: surging inflation has created less wiggle room for discretionary purchases like new clothing.

Target posted net income of $712 million, or $1.54 per share in its fiscal third quarter. That compares with $1.49 billion, or $3.04 per share in the year ago period. Analysts had expected $2.16 per share in the latest quarter, according to FactSet.

Revenue rose 3.4% to $26.52 billion compared with the year ago quarter. The sales came above estimates for $26.41 billion, according to FactSet.

Comparable sales increased 2.7% — those that come from stores and online — on top of a 12.7% growth last year.

Cosmetics, food, beverage and household essential drove sales, offsetting weakness in discretionary items. There were some bright spots — Target gained market share across all five of its key merchandise categories based on the number of items sold. And Cornell said that shoppers are ready to spend when it comes to such events as Halloween and the back-to-school season.

The quarterly operating income margin rate was 3.9% in 2022, compared with 7.8% in 2021 as markdowns hit profits, as well as rising theft and merchandise and freight costs.

The company also said that it is seeing theft at its stores grow. Executives told reporters on a call that the chain booked more than $400 million in losses from theft so far this year.

Target said that because of the softening of sales and profits toward the end of the reporting period, the company will plan for a “wide range of sales outcomes in the fourth quarter.”

Target said that it expects a low-single-digit decline for comparable sales for the fourth quarter with an operating margin rate of around 3%.

  • Associated Categories: Associated Press (AP), AP Business, AP Business - Corporate News, AP Business - Economy, AP Business - Personal Finance
© Copyright 2023 AccessWDUN.com
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.
'War not an excuse:' Ukraine rail boss keeps trains running
Among the bitter lessons that Ukrainians have had to learn in the nearly nine months since Russia invaded is that what’s here today can be destroyed tomorrow and that nothing in war can be taken for granted
6:58AM ( 8 minutes ago )
Target's 3Q profit drops 52% as shoppers force discounts
Target is reporting an uptick in third-quarter sales but posted a 52% drop in profits
6:32AM ( 33 minutes ago )
UK inflation accelerates to 41-year high of 11.1%
Britain’s inflation rate rose to a 41-year high in October, fueling demands for the government to do more to ease the nation’s cost-of-living crisis when it releases new tax and spending plans Thursday
6:32AM ( 34 minutes ago )
Associated Press (AP)
Live Updates | Russia-Ukraine-War
The Kremlin is offering rare praise for the United States, applauding President Joe Biden’s “restrained” reaction to reports about a Russian-made missile landing in Poland
5:39AM ( 1 hour ago )
Official says oil tanker hit by bomb-carrying drone off Oman
An oil tanker associated with an Israeli billionaire has been struck by a bomb-carrying drone off the coast of Oman amid heightened tensions with Iran
5:27AM ( 1 hour ago )
G-20 leaders end summit condemning Russia despite divisions
Members of the Group of 20 leading economies have ended their summit in Indonesia with a declaration of firm condemnation of the war in Ukraine and a warning that the conflict is making an already delicate world economy worse
5:21AM ( 1 hour ago )
AP Business
Trump seeks White House again amid GOP losses, legal probes
Former President Donald Trump has launched another run for the presidency, promising supporters he will “make America great and glorious again.”
12:03AM ( 7 hours ago )
Trump strikes new overseas deal and raises old ethics issue
Donald Trump’s company is licensing its name to a golf resort in Oman in the first of what it hopes will be several overseas deals, raising conflicts-of-interest issues as the former president has announced a third run for the White House
9:58PM ( 9 hours ago )
Trump Org.'s longtime CFO testifies at company's fraud trial
The Trump Organization’s longtime finance chief has testified at trial that he saved it hundreds of thousands of dollars by scheming to evade taxes on company-paid perks, including a Manhattan apartment and luxury cars
8:22PM ( 10 hours ago )
AP Business - Corporate News
Rent stabilization measures win in US midterm election
Ballot measures to build more affordable housing and protect tenants from soaring rent increases were plentiful and fared well in last week’s midterm elections
12:22AM ( 6 hours ago )
Leaders quietly work to ramp up pressure on N. Korea at G-20
With all the big issues dominating this week’s meeting of leaders of the world’s biggest economies — war, famine, poverty, to name just a few — there’s been little public discussion of North Korea and its pursuit of nuclear-armed missiles
8:54PM ( 10 hours ago )
Biden facing pressure to extend student loan payment pause
President Joe Biden is facing mounting pressure to extend a pause on student loan payments after his cancellation plan suffered a pair of legal blows
4:50PM ( 14 hours ago )
AP Business - Economy
Adults need toys, too: Some holiday gift suggestions
Adults, they need toys too
9:11AM ( 21 hours ago )
Appeals court ruling keeps Biden student debt plan on hold
President Joe Biden’s plan to forgive student loan debt for millions of borrowers lost another battle in court on Monday when a federal appeals court panel agreed to a preliminary injunction halting the program while an appeal plays out
5:07PM ( 1 day ago )
AP Business - Personal Finance
'War not an excuse:' Ukraine rail boss keeps trains running
Among the bitter lessons that Ukrainians have had to learn in the nearly nine months since Russia invaded is that what’s here today can be destroyed tomorrow and that nothing in war can be taken for granted
6:58AM ( 8 minutes ago )
UK inflation accelerates to 41-year high of 11.1%
Britain’s inflation rate rose to a 41-year high in October, fueling demands for the government to do more to ease the nation’s cost-of-living crisis when it releases new tax and spending plans Thursday
6:32AM ( 34 minutes ago )
NASA's mightiest moon rocket lifts off 50 years after Apollo
NASA’s new moon rocket has blasted off on its debut flight with three test dummies aboard
6:30AM ( 35 minutes ago )
Ukraine backers get behind probe of missile blast in Poland
U.S. President Joe Biden and other Western backers of Ukraine are throwing their weight behind Poland's investigation into why and how a missile came down in Polish farmland, killing two
6:20AM ( 46 minutes ago )
Poland says missile blast likely unfortunate accident
Poland's president says that there are no indications that the missile blast in Poland that killed two people was an “intentional attack,” describing it as mostly likely an unfortunate accident
6:15AM ( 51 minutes ago )