Target Corporation (TGT) shares ticked up slightly on Tuesday, but don't mistake that for optimism. The retailer is heading into third-quarter earnings on Wednesday trading uncomfortably close to its 52-week low, and investors are wondering whether the results will offer any reason for hope or just confirm what the stock price has been screaming all year.
What the Numbers Should Look Like
Target is expected to report earnings of $1.72 per share on revenue of $25.34 billion when results drop before the opening bell Wednesday. Last quarter, the company managed to beat expectations with earnings of $2.05 per share versus the $2.03 consensus, and revenue of $25.21 billion against estimates of $24.93 billion. But here's the thing: Target's track record on beats has been inconsistent lately, so there's no clear pattern to lean on.
Analysts Aren't Feeling the Love
Ahead of the report, Wall Street analysts have been adjusting their positions, and the moves aren't exactly bullish. Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman maintained a Market Perform rating with a $110 price target, while JPMorgan's Christopher Horvers kept his Neutral rating but slashed his price target from $117 down to $100. That's a meaningful cut, and it tells you something about expectations.
The consensus price target sits at $107.93, with estimates ranging from a high of $150 to a low of $80, according to market data. That wide spread suggests nobody really knows what to make of Target right now.
The Technical Picture Looks Rough
Target is currently trading near its 52-week low of $85.36, reflecting a brutal year-to-date decline of 35.1%. The stock is sitting about 1.5% below its 50-day moving average of $90.44 and roughly 11.4% below its 200-day moving average of $100.47. Neither of those signals confidence.
The relative strength index (RSI) stands at 41.34, which indicates neutral sentiment—not oversold, not overbought, just kind of stuck in limbo. Key support is pegged at $88.48, basically where the stock closed previously, while resistance sits at $92.61. If Target breaks above that resistance level, it could signal a reversal. If it drops below support, well, buckle up for more downside.
Size Matters in Retail
Target's market capitalization of $40.21 billion makes it a mid-sized player in the retail sector, which sounds fine until you remember it's competing against giants like Walmart and Amazon. That size disadvantage affects everything from pricing power to scale efficiencies, especially in a tough economic environment where consumers are watching every dollar.
The current technical setup suggests traders should watch closely for a decisive move. If Target can't hold above $88.48, further downside is likely. But if it manages to rally past $92.61, it might finally catch a break and shift sentiment from bearish to cautiously optimistic. Wednesday's earnings report will probably determine which direction it goes.
At the time of writing, Target shares were trading 0.72% higher at $89.16.