Target Shares Plunge on Its Holiday Outlook. Should Investors Buy the Dip in the Stock?

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Target (NYSE: TGT) is getting labeled as the Grinch heading into the holiday season, after the retailer saw its shares plunge following poor third-quarter results and subdued guidance for the upcoming quarter. This most recent earnings summary was in contrast to rival Walmart (NYSE: WMT), which reported strong quarterly sales and was upbeat approaching the all-important holidays for retailers.

The slump in Target’s share price now has the stock trading down about 14% on the year, as of this writing. Let’s take a closer look at its most recent report and guidance to see if this dip in price could be a nice holiday gift for investors interested in the stock.

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After turning in solid results last quarter and looking like a turnaround was at hand, Target laid an egg when it announced its third-quarter results. Revenue edged up just 0.3% to $25.7 billion, below the $25.9 billion analyst consensus. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS), meanwhile, fell 12% to $1.85, badly missing analysts’ expectations of $2.30.

Same-store sales (comps) also rose by 0.3%, helped by a 2.4% increase in traffic. However, its average ticket declined by 2%. E-commerce sales jumped by 10.8%, but in-store comparable sales fell 1.9%. Beauty was once again a standout category for Target, with the segment seeing 6% comps growth. However, the company said that overall, consumer budgets remain stretched due to years of high inflation. It said this is leading to customers waiting for deals and then stocking up.

The retailer continued to see strong growth in loyalty members, adding 3 million in the quarter. Target management said this is helping with the company’s ad business, which grew by the mid-teens in the quarter. Meanwhile, after increasing gross margins last quarter, Target saw them slip 20 basis points year over year to 27.2% and by 170 basis points sequentially from 28.9% in the second quarter. Management blamed higher digital fulfillment and supply chain costs for the decline.

Looking ahead, Target slashed its full-year earnings guidance, taking it to a range of $8.30 to $8.90 per share from a prior outlook of $9 to $9.70. That comes a quarter after the company raised its guidance.

Metric

Original Guidance

Prior Guidance

New Guidance

Adjusted EPS

$8.60 to $9.60

$9 to $9.70

$8.30 to $8.90

Source: Target.

For the fourth quarter, it forecast comps to be flat, with adjusted EPS between $1.85 and $2.45. It said it continues to expect to see softness in spending on discretionary items. It also noted there will be five fewer shopping days between Thanksgiving and Christmas compared to last year.

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