Target will report earnings before the bell — here’s what to expect

Target will report earnings before the bell — here’s what to expect


A sign outside of a Target department store on June 07, 2022 in Miami, Florida. Target announced that it expects profits will take a short-term hit, as it marks down unwanted items, cancels orders and takes aggressive steps to get rid of extra inventory.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

Target on Wednesday will report its fiscal third-quarter earnings, as the big-box retailer tries to clear through an abundance of extra inventory and woo holiday shoppers.

Here’s what Wall Street is expecting, according to Refinitiv:

  • Earnings per share: $2.13
  • Revenue: $26.38 billion

Target’s inventory was up 43% year over year in the first quarter and 36% in the second quarter. The retailer cut its outlook twice, first in May and then in June, saying it would take a hit to profits as it cancelled orders and aggressively marked down TVs, small kitchen appliances and more to make space for fresh merchandise for the back-to-school and holiday season.

This summer, the company also said it would stock up more on high-frequency categories like food and essentials, as Americans pulled back in other areas like home and apparel.

Those actions hurt the company in the second quarter, with profits falling nearly 90%. Yet Chief Financial Officer Michael Fiddelke said the moves would position the company for a stronger back half of the year.

Target said in August that it expects full-year revenue growth in the low to mid single digits. It also expects its operating margin rate to rebound and be in a range around 6% in the second half of the year. That would represent a jump from its operating margin rate of 1.2% in the fiscal second quarter. 

Target competitor Walmart beat Wall Street’s expectations on Tuesday, saying low-priced groceries are drawing customers across income levels. The company also showed improvement with its own inventory woes, saying inventory is up only 13% year over year — with most of that coming from inflation.

Target, however, sells a different mix of merchandise. Only 20% of its annual sales come from grocery compared with Walmart, which gets nearly 56% from the category, according to the two companies’ most recent annual reports.

Target is better known for launching and growing trendy, but low-priced private label brands, such as activewear brand All in Motion, and Hearth & Hand, a home brand created with TV stars Chip and Joanna Gaines. Yet sales in those categories have cooled, as inflation runs hot and consumers spend on travel and other services again.

It kicked off holiday sales early, too. Target’s Deal Days began in October, a week before Amazon’s second Prime Day-like sales event. Walmart also threw a rival event.

Shares of Target are down more than 22% so far this year, steeper than the 16% decline on the S&P 500 index. Shares closed on Tuesday at $178.98, bringing the company’s market value to $83.38 billion.



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