Target wrestles with pullback in spending and theft
The issues could cost the retailer $500M this year
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Target on Wednesday reported another quarterly profit decline and issued a cautious sales and profit outlook for the current period.
The Minneapolis company is dealing with rising costs, which includes rising theft as a big factor, and consumers who have become more cautious about spending.
The company still topped Wall Street expectations and stuck to annual profit guidance above industry analyst projections. Shares rose 1.4 percent before the opening bell.
Target is among the first major U.S. retailers to report quarterly results, and a lot of attention will be paid to the impact that stubbornly high inflation and tightening credit are having on customers. Walmart, Macy’s and Nordstrom post earnings in the next two weeks.
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Home Depot, the nation's largest home improvement retailer, said Tuesday that it expects its first annual revenue decline since 2009. Also on Tuesday, U.S. data showed that Americans picked up their spending modestly last month, buoyed by a solid job market and a retreat in prices for some things. But it also revealed how Americans are barely keeping up with inflation.
First-quarter net income slipped nearly 6 percent to $950 million, or $2.05 per share, for the three-month period ended April 29. That compares with $1.01 billion, or $2.16 per share, in the year-ago period.
Sales rose 0.6 percent to $25.32 billion in the quarter, up from $25.17 billion in the year-ago quarter. Analysts expected earnings of $1.77 per share on $25.26 billion in sales in the latest period, according to FactSet.
It's the fifth-consecutive quarter that the retailer’s profit has slipped, although it was much smaller this time. Target reported a 43 percent drop in profits for the fourth quarter, a 52 percent drop in third-quarter profits, 90 percent in the second quarter and a 52 percent decline in last year's first quarter.
Target earnings per share to be in a range from $1.30 to $1.70 in the current quarter. Analysts were expecting $1.95 per share, according to FactSet. For the full year, the company is maintaining its prior guidance of $7.75 per share to $8.75 per share. Analysts are expecting $8.36 per share, according to FactSet.
Target said theft is hurting its profitability, and predicted more than $500 million in losses from shoplifting this year, on top of the $650 million in losses it incurred during its last fiscal year. The company said it's seeing an increasing number of violent incidents at stores and doesn't want to close stores because that hurts workers and the community. The retailer said it's embracing different measures, from expanding security to locking up certain items.
First-quarter comparable sales — or those from stores or digital channels operating for the past 12 months — were flat compared with the year-ago period. Customer traffic was up, but shoppers focused on buying necessities like health and beauty and groceries over non-essentials. Comparable stores sales grew 0.7 percent but comparable online sales declined.
“We came into 2023 clear-eyed about what consumers were facing with persistent inflation and rising interest rates,” CEO Brian Cornell said during a media call Tuesday.
Given this competitive environment, Target is continuing to make investments in stores and online.
The discounter said in early March that it plans to invest as much as $5 billion this year expanding services for customers, including a drive-up service for returns, renovations at 175 stores and improvements in online shopping.