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Target hit by worst rout since Black Monday

Margins fall as the surge in costs continues

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“The Target margin shortfall is more dramatic than what Walmart posted and clearly there are some industry-wide problems occurring.”

Adam Crisafulli

DALLAS: Target Corp plunged the most since 1987’s Black Monday crash after becoming the second big retailer in two days to trim its profit forecast.

A surge in costs during the first quarter showed little sign of easing, chief executive officer Brian Cornell said. Operating profit will amount to only about 6% of sales this year, two percentage points below the previous forecast, Target said.

And the company’s first-quarter adjusted profit missed the lowest of 23 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

“We were less profitable than we expected to be, or intend to be over time,” Cornell said in a briefing.

“Looking ahead, it’s clear that many of these cost pressures will persist in the near term.”

Target’s worsening outlook echoed the darker panorama at Walmart Inc, which cut its profit forecast on Tuesday and also posted its biggest stock decline since 1987.

Target’s fuel and freight costs soared in the first quarter while a shift in consumer spending caused a sharper-than-expected slowdown in apparel and home-goods sales, prompting the company to mark down bloated inventorie­s.

“For the last two years, these guys have done nothing but blow out expectatio­ns,” said Brian Yarbrough, a retail analyst at Edward Jones. “In one quarter, that’s all wiped away. Now it’s a ‘show-me’ story.”

Target sank 25% to US$161.61 (RM712.13) at the close in New York, the worst plunge since Oct 19, 1987, an infamous market collapse known as Black Monday.

The shares had fallen 7% this year before the results, outperform­ing a 26% drop in an S&P 500 index of consumer-discretion­ary stocks.

Target is now trading at its lowest level since late 2020, giving back much of its pandemic-era gains. The share plunge dragged down other retailers as well and provided fuel for the biggest market rout in almost two years.

Costco Wholesale Corp, Dollar General Corp and Dollar Tree Inc, which are preparing to report results next week, all posted double-digit declines.

Investors received another dose of bad news after the close when Bath & Body Works Inc slashed its profit outlook.

The company cited inflation as well as a decision to boost investment in informatio­n technology and its customer loyalty programme. The retailers’ results reinforced how profitabil­ity is starting to erode across the industry.

“The Target margin shortfall is more dramatic than what Walmart posted and clearly there are some industry-wide/macro problems occurring,” Adam Crisafulli, an analyst

at Vital Knowledge, said in a report.

“Food/gas inflation is drawing dollars away from discretion­ary/general merchandis­e, forcing aggressive discountin­g to clear out product.”

On a conference call to discuss earnings, Barclays Plc analyst Karen Short questioned why Target was cutting its outlook so soon after an upbeat investor meeting in early March.

Cornell said the company “did not anticipate the rapid change in conditions” that has occurred since then. Adjusted earnings tumbled to US$2.19 (RM9.65) a share during the three months ending in late April, the Minneapoli­s-based retailer said in a statement.

Analysts had been expecting US$3.06 (RM13.48) on average.

Like Walmart, Target reported robust sales as US consumers powered ahead despite the highest inflation in four decades. Target’s comparable sales climbed 3.3% in the first quarter, almost three times the average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Revenue rose 4% to Us$25.2bil (Rm111bil). Wall Street had expected Us$24.3bil (Rm107.1bil).

But strong demand for food and beverages, beauty products and household essentials went along with “lower-than-expected sales in discretion­ary categories,” Target said.

That’s a sign that shoppers are pulling back as they struggle to buy basic goods.

Cornell said customers were buying more of Target’s store brands, a common strategy for shoppers seeking bargains.

The CEO also cited a “dramatic change in sales mix” as the Covid-19 pandemic abates.

Customers who bought television sets or kitchen appliances last year might be purchasing restaurant gift cards or luggage for upcoming trips this year, he said.

The value of Target’s inventory surged 8.5% from the previous quarter and 43% from a year earlier.

Retailers generally try to avoid piling up inventory because it can incur costs. Indeed, inventory impairment­s were one of the causes of the company’s lower-than-expected profitabil­ity. Chief financial officer Michael Fiddelke said additional markdowns were likely in the current quarter.

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