The Columbus Dispatch

Target wants shoppers to notice its prices

- By Sarah Halzack

Target acknowledg­ed on Wednesday that it has a long way to go to nurse its troubled business back to health, as the big-box giant reported that traffic to its stores declined in the most recent quarter, as did sales at its stores open more than a year.

The retailer said it is focusing on a crucial problem: Even as it has made strides in department­s such as home decor and kids’ clothing, it has not done a good enough job of convincing shoppers that it is a destinatio­n for low prices on everyday grocery and household items.

“We believe that consumer perception of value at Target has not reflected how low our out-the-door prices are,” Brian Cornell, Target’s chief executive, said on a conference call with investors.

The chain is investing in new marketing campaigns to try to change shoppers’ attitudes about this, but executives caution that they expect it will take time to show an effect.

Target’s stock jumped more than 2 percent on Wednesday, as the lackluster results didn’t turn out to be quite as bad as Wall Street expected. But Cornell was quick to point out that “we’re not doing any high-fives in the room today.”

That’s because the results were discouragi­ng in a number of key ways: Important categories such as household essentials and apparel saw a drop in comparable sales. In addition to the decline in foot traffic, Target recorded a decrease in “basket size,” a measure of how much shoppers are spending each time they set foot in a store.

Still, despite the overall trouble in its apparel business, there were some noteworthy successes. Its designer collaborat­ion with Victoria Beckham was one of the bestperfor­ming in the company’s history. And swimwear, an area where it already had a dominant market share, performed strongly. Executives said they got a tail wind in the swim business from the fact that a one-time key competitor, Victoria’s Secret, has exited that category.

That market-share grab is a reminder that all the turmoil in the retail industry is creating fresh prospects for opportunis­tic competitor­s. Dick’s Sporting Goods, for example, is taking over dozens of the store locations that Sports Authority vacated last year amid a liquidatio­n. J.C. Penney is moving deeper into the appliance business. Sears, after all, is closing stores, and H.H. Gregg has filed for bankruptcy and shuttered all its stores - leaving an opening in the marketplac­e.

Target’s revenue in the quarter was down 1.1 percent to $16 billion; profit jumped 8 percent to $681 million. Online sales were up 22 percent, a healthy yearover-year increase that was nonetheles­s slower than the 34 percent growth the retailer recorded in the previous quarter.

 ?? [GENE J. PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? While Target has said it’s fixed problems in some department­s, it has not done a good enough job of convincing shoppers that it is a destinatio­n for low-priced items.
[GENE J. PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] While Target has said it’s fixed problems in some department­s, it has not done a good enough job of convincing shoppers that it is a destinatio­n for low-priced items.

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