Target 'cautious' on near-term growth outlook as more Americans are maxing out credit cards
Target projects sales in the second quarter to fall in the range of flat to 2%
Target executives issued a weak forecast Wednesday in recognizing that elevated prices continue to have a "meaningful impact" on family budgets and savings.
Target Chief Growth Officer Christina Hennington told analysts on an earnings call that one in three Americans "maxed out or is nearing the limit on at least one of their credit cards."
"For these reasons and more, we remain cautious in our near-term growth outlook," Hennington said. She projected that discretionary spending "will continue to remain pressured in the short term" but will "normalize over time."
TARGET REDUCES PRICES ON 5,000 PRODUCTS AS HIGH INFLATION PERSISTS
Sales at Target stores open for at least a year dropped 3.7% during the three-month period ending May 4 "as consumers continue to spend cautiously, particularly in discretionary categories," Target COO Michael Fiddelke said.
During the second quarter, the retailer projected sales would recover from back-to-back declines, but only modestly increase to a range from flat to 2%.
Target
WALMART CFO SAYS 'MANY CONSUMER POCKETBOOKS' ARE BEING STRETCHED AS HIGH INFLATION PERSISTS
Target reported adjusted earnings per share of $2.03, missing Wall Street estimates.
Its total revenue was $24.53 billion, down 3.1% percent from the same time a year ago, though slightly better than the $24.52 billion Wall Street expected.
The release of Target's quarterly results comes shortly after Walmart CFO John David Rainey highlighted in the Arkansas-based retailer's earnings how "many consumer pocketbooks are still stretched."
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
---|---|---|---|---|
WMT | WALMART INC. | 92.50 | +0.62 | +0.67% |
Walmart's earnings topped Wall Street expectations, though the company recognized that consumers are still spending more of their paychecks on non-discretionary categories rather than general merchandise.