San Diego Union-Tribune

TARGET ’20 SALES GROWTH EXPLODES

Company will speed up delivery network, add smaller-format stores

- BY ANNE D’INNOCENZIO D’Innocenzio writes for The Associated Press.

Target will plow $4 billion into its business this year to redo its stores and add new ones as well as speed up its delivery network, as the discounter aims to keep up with increasing demands of its shoppers shaped by the pandemic.

The investment, announced Tuesday, includes testing a “sortation center” in Minneapoli­s that will free up time and space for workers at its surroundin­g stores. Target will also accelerate the pace of building small-format stores, with plans to add 30 to 40 new stores this year, up from 29 last year. It also plans to step up the pace of its store remodel program.

The capital investment is up 50 percent from the previous year.

The moves come as the Minneapoli­s-based discounter extended its sales streak through the holiday quarter and sales grew by more than $15 billion. That exceeded the company’s annual sales growth over the past 11 years combined.

With the habits of millions altered because of the spread of COVID-19, online sales last year surged by almost $10 billion and Target made it increasing­ly easy to shop.

Fourth-quarter profits soared 66 percent and sales jumped 21 percent, both topping Wall Street expectatio­ns.

Sales at stores opened at least a year rose 6.9 percent compared with the same period last year. Online sales soared 118 percent. Customer traffic in stores rose 3.7 percent, and average dollars spent rose 15 percent.

In the previous quarter, samestore sales rose 10 percent, while online sales spiked 155 percent.

The retailer picked up $9 billion in market share from rivals in fiscal 2020.

Big-box stores including Home Depot, Lowe’s and Walmart all had huge fourth quarters with Americans still consolidat­ing shopping trips.

Like all big-box stores, Target was allowed to stay open during the early onset of the pandemic last year, while department stores and mall-based retailers were forced to temporaril­y close because they were considered nonessenti­al. That increased the dominance of Target and other discounter­s.

Target, which had already been expanding its delivery services before the pandemic, pushed even harder in that area. Sameday services such as picking up orders inside the store or at curbside, soared 212 percent, led by drive-up service, which increased more than 500 percent.

And its omnipresen­t store locations have been an advantage. More than 95 percent of Target’s fourth-quarter sales were fulfilled by its own stores.

Target says that shoppers who use those services are spending more. First-time users of Target’s drive-up service spent 30 percent more on average, it said.

“We placed the physical store more firmly at the center of our omni-channel platform, and we created a durable sustainabl­e and scalable business model that puts Target on a road of our own,“Target CEO Brian Cornell told analysts at its annual analyst’s’ meeting.

Target’s push starting in 2016 to build its own store brands, including Cat & Jack and Goodfellow & Co., have also pulled in shoppers. Ten of its brands each generate $1 billion or more, and four of those have crossed the $2 billion, the company said.

Overall sales in 2020 rose 19.8 percent to $92.4 billion, up from $77.1 billion last year.

Target has also announced a series of partnershi­ps that should help drive more shoppers to its stores. Late last year, it signed a deal with beauty chain Ulta Beauty that will place Ulta shops in more than 100 Target stores by mid-2021.

Target said net income rose to $1.38 billion, or $2.73 per share, in the fourth quarter, from $834 million, or $1.63 per share.

Sales rose 21 percent to $28 billion for the quarter. Analysts were expecting $27.4 billion.

The company did not provide a financial outlook due to uncertaint­y related to the pandemic. Target was among many that pulled back on guidance at the onset of the pandemic. Best Buy and Macy’s both offered outlooks when they reported earnings results last week.

 ?? JOHN GIBBINS U-T FILE ?? Target, which stayed open during last year’s initial lockdown, picked up $9 billion in market share from rivals in fiscal 2020.
JOHN GIBBINS U-T FILE Target, which stayed open during last year’s initial lockdown, picked up $9 billion in market share from rivals in fiscal 2020.

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