Target CEO ‘guiding for some conservatism’ as the retailer misses earnings estimates ahead of the holidays

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A few months after suggesting a sales turnaround is afoot, Target (TGT) has offered up an earnings day misfire from start to finish.

On Wednesday, the retail giant badly missed third quarter Wall Street profit forecasts, slashed full-year guidance after raising it the previous quarter, and took a cautious stance on holiday sales and profit.

Its shares sank 16% in premarket trading on the heels of the release of its quarterly results.

By contrast, its rival Walmart (WMT) beat expectations again — significantly — in quarterly same-store sales performance, online sales growth, and overall narrative to investors, in its own report on Tuesday. Target has been slashing prices on food and other everyday essentials this year in a bid to compete.

On a call with reporters, Target execs offered up little explanation for the U-turn in results, except to note that consumers are spending “cautiously” in more-discretionary departments such as home goods. The company also felt the brunt of unplanned costs in its supply chain as it added more inventory than it sold in the quarter — never a recipe for success for a retailer.

Target’s veteran Chairman and CEO Brian Cornell told Yahoo Finance it has the “appropriate approach” for the holiday season, but is “guiding for some conservatism.”

Read more: What’s Macy’s CEO Tony Spring said about holidays at Yahoo Finance’s Invest conference

Cornell added the holiday shopping season is off to a “really good start” but acknowledged the biggest days are ahead of it. Walmart CFO John David Rainey told Yahoo Finance on Tuesday it has seen a brisk start to the season.

Target stock was up 9% year to date ahead of the results, lagging the S&P 500’s 24% advance. Walmart’s stock was up a cool 64% on the year.

“The stock seems constrained in the near term given the uncertainty of the holiday, in which Target faces headwinds from a promotionally/event-driven consumer and likely acutely benefitted, relative to other retailers, from the beneficial calendar a year ago (now a headwind), along with tariffs,” JPMorgan analyst Christopher Horvers wrote in a client note.

Horvers added: “Like they do so very often for retailers, comparable sales and gross margin matter, with the former a relatively low bar and the latter a high bar. Given uncertainty and share losses, we see Target as unlikely to roll forward to 2026 valuation anytime soon.”

A sign on a Target store in Harmarville, Pa., is shown on Sept. 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

Here’s what Target reported for the third quarter, compared to Wall Street analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg:

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