In
contrast, larger rival Walmart Inc on Tuesday beat estimates as
its core base of low-to-middle income shoppers flocked to its
stores for bargains on groceries and other essential items.
Target's comparable sales rose 2.6% in the second quarter ended
July 30, below analysts' average estimate of a 3.3% increase,
according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
Its operating margin rate tumbled to 1.2% in the quarter, below
the 2% forecast last month and 9.8% a year earlier, due to costs
related with clearing out excess merchandise on store shelves,
including through heavy discounting.
U.S. retailers including Target and Best Buy Co Inc cut their
profitability forecasts in recent weeks as consumers squeezed by
higher prices of everything from toothpaste to gas curtailed
spending on items like apparel and electronics.
Target, which relies more on discretionary categories, has been
hit harder compared to retailers like Walmart that stock a
greater portion of their shelves with food and other everyday
essentials.
The company's shares dipped marginally in choppy premarket
trading. They have lost more than 22% of their value this year.
Minneapolis-based Target reiterated it would return to an around
6% annual operating margin rate but said it was still "cautious"
about demand for discretionary items.
"The vast majority of the costs to get our inventory where we
wanted it are behind us... we're well positioned to see improved
profit performance in the back half of the year," Chief
Financial Officer Michael Fiddelke said on a media call.
The company reported quarterly earnings of $183 million, or 39
cents per share.
Even with the heavy discounting, inventory rose 1.6% at the end
of the quarter from the prior quarter, with total merchandise at
$15.3 billion.
The increase in inventory was due to the company expediting
product shipments for the back-to-school and holiday shopping
periods in a still "choppy" supply chain environment, Chief
Executive Brian Cornell said.
(Reporting by Uday Sampath in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj
Kalluvila)
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