Earnings

Target expects sales growth to continue, as it reports 9% jump in holiday-quarter revenue

Shoppers enter a Target store in Washington, DC, on February 17, 2022.
Nicholas Kamm | AFP | Getty Images

Target on Tuesday said sales rose 9% in the fiscal fourth quarter, as it weathered supply chain challenges over the holidays and built on e-commerce and customer gains during the pandemic.

The discounter said it expects sales to keep increasing this year, even as shoppers see prices of food, fuel and other goods creep higher. It forecast revenue growth in the low to mid single-digits and projected adjusted earnings per share to rise by high single-digits. Those are above analysts’ expectations, according to Refinitiv. 

Shares are up more than 8% in premarket trading.

The big-box retailer will hold its first in-person investor day in New York City since the start of the pandemic, a two-year span that has turbocharged Target’s stock price and revenue. Shares of the company have soared 84% since mid-March 2020, when Covid-19 was declared a pandemic. Its annual revenue has reached $106 billion, up nearly 36% over the past two years.

Investors will listen for how Target will compete for consumers’ money and time, as people juggle more spending priorities in a reopening world and feel the sting of inflation.

CEO Brian Cornell said in a news release that Target will continue to differentiate “through affordability, assortment, ease and convenience.” 

To do that, Cornell said in November that Target would protect low prices, even if that meant absorbing some of the higher costs of transportation, materials and labor. 

The company is also leaning into online services, which gained a following as safe, contactless ways to shop. Starting in the fall, customers can make returns or pick up a Starbucks coffee without leaving the car at select stores – perks that may appeal as people juggle fuller social calendars again.

Sales through Target’s same-day services – which include Drive Up, its curbside pickup option; Order Pickup, its in-store retrieval of online purchases; and Shipt, its home delivery service – grew by 45% in the fiscal year. That’s after 235% growth in 2020.

Here’s what Target reported for the fiscal fourth quarter ended Jan. 29, compared with Refinitiv consensus estimates:

  • Earnings per share: $3.19 adjusted vs. $2.86, expected
  • Revenue: $31 billion vs. $31.39 billion expected

Net income rose about 12% to $1.54 billion, or $3.21 per share, from $1.38 billion, or $2.73 per share, a year earlier. Excluding items, the retailer earned $3.19 per share, higher than the $2.86 per share expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.

Total revenue increased to $31 billion from the same period a year ago, slightly below analysts’ expectations of $31.39 billion.

Target faces challenging comparisons due to the pandemic. In the holiday quarter, for instance, it went up against a year-ago period when Americans had extra dollars from stimulus checks to spend on holiday gifts and some Americans chose to consolidate shopping trips to reduce risk.

Comparable sales, a key retail metric that tracks sales online and at stores open at least a year, increased 8.9% in the fourth quarter. That’s lower than the 10.5% gain that analysts expected, according to StreetAccount.

Customers made more trips to Target’s stores and website in the fourth quarter compared with a year ago, the company said. Combined traffic online and in stores increased by 8.1%, but the average transaction amount rose less than 1% compared with a year earlier.

Supply chain challenges put pressure on the company’s profits as Target had a larger workforce and higher pay at its distribution centers and paid more for freight and merchandise. As the company geared up for the start of the holiday quarter, Target had more than $2 billion higher inventory than the previous year to make sure it had plenty to put on store shelves.

Labor costs are rising, too. Target said Monday it will spend $300 million more in the year ahead on wages and health care benefits. It’s hiking pay as retailers compete for employees in a tight market. It said starting wages will range from $15 to $25 for hourly employees, based on role and local market. About 20% more employees will qualify for medical benefits as it drops the minimum average hours a week from 30 hours to 25 hours, the company said. 

The company has worked toward a higher minimum wage over the past five years, as lawmakers in some cities and states pushed to require more pay. Starting in July, hourly workers began to make at least $15 an hour

In fiscal 2023 and beyond, Target said it anticipates annual revenue growth in the mid single-digits and adjusted earnings per share in the high single-digits. It said it plans to spend $4 billion to $5 billion on capital expenditures each year.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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