San Antonio Express-News

Sour holiday at Target bodes ill for retail stores

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Target reported a rare shortfall in holiday sales, raising concerns about the challenges ahead for the traditiona­l retail industry even as the economy remains strong.

Target’s disappoint­ing growth of 1.4 percent for November and December, dragged down by toys and electronic­s, fell well below the previous year. Target joined a growing list of retailers reporting meager performanc­es during the critical holiday shopping season.

Target cut its expectatio­ns for same-store sales growth for the entire quarter Wednesday. Shares fell more than 7 percent in afternoon trading, making it the biggest decliner in the benchmark S&P 500.

The latest evidence of weak numbers from a major retailer cast a pall over the entire sector, with investors leery of any hints that the consumer, a major driver of the U.S. economy, is getting nervous. The retail sector declined while overall markets were up.

The report of weak toys and electronic­s sales also hit other companies like Hasbro and Best Buy.

However, analysts say the consumer remains financiall­y strong, and some blamed increasing competitio­n from not only Amazon but a slew of online competitor­s from mattress maker Casper to home goods purveyor Wayfair. Many believe that they are all starting to create material headwinds for traditiona­l retailers.

“We are seeing a healthy consumer that is choosing different ways to spend the same amount of money,” said Joel Bines, managing director at consulting firm Alixpartne­rs. “The consumer today is presented with an array of options for virtually every product you can think of from footwear to apparel to toys and games to electronic­s.”

Bines added that many of these online retailers are held to different standards for profitabil­ity compared to traditiona­l large companies.

Ken Perkins, president of Retail Metrics, a retail research firm, agrees.

“Consumers can sign up for all these subscripti­on services from pies to clothing,” he said. “That’s definitely siphoning off sales from traditiona­l retailers.”

Target experience­d weakerthan-expected sales of electronic­s, toys and home goods. Comparable sales of 1.4 percent in the November-december period contrasted with a very strong 5.7 percent increase a year earlier. Target’s toy sales were flat, while consumer electronic­s business fell more than 6 percent. Home goods sales were down more than 1 percent.

Jim Silver, editor-in-chief of TTPM.COM, a toy review site, believes Amazon picked up market share in toys this past holiday season, based on his talks with toy manufactur­ers. He also noted that the demise of Toys R Us in 2018 has hurt impulse buying.

“Impulse buying doesn’t happen online and can add up to significan­t volume,” Silver said.

Target’s digital sales rose 19 percent, also down from last year’s jump of 29 percent.

Target Corp., based in Minneapoli­s, said it now foresees fourthquar­ter comparable-sales growth in line with the 1.4 percent increase it experience­d during the holiday period. It had previously forecast a rise of between 3 percent and 4 percent.

Target and other discounter­s like Walmart have been among the strongest performers in retail even as Amazon continues to make inroads. They have reconfigur­ed product lineups and improved delivery services with some success.

Other department stores, namely those in malls, have not had the same success. J.C. Penney, Kohl’s and L Brands, the parent company of Victoria’s Secret, all reported holiday sales declines. Macy’s reported a small decline in holiday sales, though it was better than what investors had expected.

The National Retail Federation, the nation’s largest retail trade group, forecasts that holiday sales will rise between 3.8 percent and 4.2 percent for November and December. The holiday sales forecast marks an increase from the disappoint­ing 2.1 percent for the 2018 period. But it’s above the average holiday sales growth of 3.7 percent over the previous five years. The group is expected to release final holiday results Thursday following the government’s release of December retail sales.

Retailers post fiscal fourthquar­ter results next month and that will certainly provide more insight into the mood of U.S. consumers through January.

Neil Saunders, managing director of research firm Globaldata Retail, said Target’s holiday performanc­e wasn’t dire, as it was going to be tough for the chain to top its strong year-ago results. He also believes that the disappoint­ing electronic­s and home sales were impacted by the timing of Black Friday, coming later this year.

“Overall, Target remains a good retailer on the right trajectory,“‘ Saunders wrote. “It may have stumbled and slowed over the holidays, but it is still one of the most attractive runners in the retail race.”

That was largely the sentiment among industry analysts.

Seth Sigman of Credit Suisse agreed, saying that “there are many bright spots within that would point to this being more of a blip rather than the start of a new trend.”

 ?? John Minchillo / Associated Press ?? Despite Black Friday shoppers, Target this past holiday season fell well below the previous year, joining a growing list of retailers reporting meager performanc­es.
John Minchillo / Associated Press Despite Black Friday shoppers, Target this past holiday season fell well below the previous year, joining a growing list of retailers reporting meager performanc­es.

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