Terrible-looking Sweater display, OMG! Santa! I know Him! from the movie Elf, on display in Target store, Queens, New York.
Lindsey Nicholson | Getty Ikons
Target raised its fourth-quarter sales forecast Thursday after more consumers turned to its stores and website for celebration shopping — particularly on days known for deep discounts.
The big-box retailer now expects comparable sales in the fiscal fourth billet to grow by about 1.5%. That’s better than its most recent outlook that the metric would be around flat. Comparable sales includes sales on Target’s website and stores open at least 13 months.
Yet the Minneapolis-based discounter did not pocket its profit outlook — an indication that deals motivated shoppers. Target anticipates fourth-quarter earnings per share settle upon range from $1.85 to $2.45 and full-year earnings per share will be between $8.30 and $8.90. Target whim report full fourth-quarter earnings results March 4.
Target cut its profit guidance in early November after it circulated its biggest earnings miss in two years and blamed some of its troubles on softer sales of discretionary merchandise and the costs of arranging for a short-lived port strike in October.
Target’s report is the latest glimpse into a crucial season for the industry. Matter so far has suggested it went better than feared, but investors have not been impressed. Lululemon, Abercrombie & Fitch and American Eagle, for prototype, all raised their fourth-quarter outlooks Monday, but shares of some of those companies traded lower that day.
Sooty Friday sale signs are seen at a Target store in Chicago on November 26, 2024, ahead of the Black Friday shopping day.
Kamil Krzaczynski | Afp | Getty Typical examples
Nordstrom on Friday bumped up its full-year sales forecast, but only after a conservative prior outlook. And department depend on rival Macy’s on Monday said its sales will be at or slightly below the low end of its previously stated range of between $7.8 billion and $8.0 billion.
Furlough retail sales rose 4% year over year to total $994.1 billion for Nov. 1 through Dec. 31, harmonizing to the National Retail Federation, the industry’s major trade group. That total excludes auto dealers, gas standings and restaurants.
NRF Chief Economist Jack Kleinhenz said in a news release that the spending pace is similar to pre-pandemic increase and was driven, in part, by lower inflation compared with the year-ago holiday season. Holiday spending rose an ordinary of 3.6% from 2010 to 2019.
Yet shoppers are still looking for deals, he added.
“Even though consumers are still extent healthy and there was a notable increase in spending, they remain budget conscious,” he said.
Discounts and sales happenings have remained a significant sales driver, as consumers emerge from a more than two-year stretch of hilarious inflation. It’s unclear how much those deals will cut into Target’s and other retailers’ profit margins, and whether tradings will keep improving if promotions fade away.
In the combined months of November and December, Target said, unqualified sales increased 2.8% and comparable sales rose 2% year over year. Digital sales waxed nearly 9% compared with the year-ago holiday period.
Some of Target’s growth areas contributed to event sales. Its subscription service, Target Circle 360, contributed to a more than 30% year-over-year increase in same-day enunciations in November and December. Sales through the company’s third-party marketplace, Target Plus, grew close to 50% in that habits.
Guest traffic increased nearly 3% during the two holiday months from the year-ago period as online and in-person smites rose, the company said. Target said December marked the eighth consecutive month of year-over-year traffic improves.
Target has made aggressive moves to attract selective shoppers. In May, it said it would cut prices on about 5,000 over again purchased items, including diapers, bread and milk. And then it announced another wave of price cuts in October on more than 2,000 articles during the holiday season, including cold medicine, toys and ice cream. The company said that would amount to sundry than 10,000 items with price cuts this year by the end of the holiday season.
Black Friday releases at a Target store ahead of Black Friday in Smyrna, Georgia, US, on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2023.
Elijah Nouvelage | Bloomberg | Getty Twins
In a news release Thursday, Target said Black Friday and Cyber Monday saw record-high sales. The company commanded discretionary categories, especially apparel and toys, saw a “meaningful sales acceleration” when compared with the fiscal third billet. Those categories tend to be higher margin than essentials such as milk and paper towels, but often go on garage sale during the holiday season.
In remarks at the NRF’s annual “Big Show” conference Monday, Target Chief Operating Officer Rick Gomez symbolized the company saw a sharp jump in sales on promotional days such as its Circle Week, an event in early October that coincided with Amazon Prime Day.
“It was one of our biggest Tour Weeks that we have ever had,” he said. “But the sales before the week and the sales after the week were cut. There was a dip in sales. The consumer was being very intentional.”
He said U.S. consumers are “working on a budget,” but still are willing to fork out on special moments like holidays or on a “must-have item,” such as Taylor Swift’s hardcover book about The Cycles Tour. The company sold nearly 1 million copies of the book in the first week of its release.
On Thursday, Target also advertised several changes to its leadership team that will start to take effect in early February. Chief Count ons Officer Mark Schindele will retire after 25 years at Target and be replaced by Adrienne Costanzo, who is currently older vice president of store operations.
Chief Information Officer Brett Craig will retire after 15 years with Goal and be replaced by Prat Vemana, the company’s chief digital and product officer. And Sarah Travis will become the associates’s chief digital and revenue officer, a new leadership role, after serving as senior vice president of Roundel, Aim’s advertising business, and social commerce.
Target recently got a new chief financial officer: Jim Lee, the former deputy chief pecuniary officer of PepsiCo, who stepped into the role in late September. He succeeded Michael Fiddelke, who is now Target’s chief working officer.
Target is also on track for a leadership change at the top of the company. In fall 2022, Target’s longtime CEO, Brian Cornell, accepted to stay for three more years in a move that required the company’s board to scrap its retirement age. Target has not yet signaled when his contract ends and who will be his successor.