Target Corp (TGT) and TJX Companies Inc (TJX) are telling wildly different stories about American shoppers right now, and the ETF market is listening closely.
Target kicked off Wednesday's earnings with another dose of bad news: slashed profit guidance, declining discretionary sales, fewer transactions, and a gloomy holiday forecast as households stretch budgets to cover food, rent, healthcare, and basics. Shares dipped in premarket trading and are down roughly 35% for the year. Most analysts remain firmly in Neutral-to-Sell territory.
TJX, on the other hand, raised its annual profit outlook after posting solid store traffic, stronger fall and back-to-school apparel demand, and steady interest in discounted goods. The stock is up about 21% year to date, continuing a multi-quarter winning streak where off-price retail has left big-box competitors in the dust.
ETFs Are Quietly Riding The Off-Price Wave
Here's where it gets interesting for portfolio managers and retail investors alike. Target might grab headlines, but it barely registers inside most retail and consumer discretionary ETFs. The stock typically holds fractional weightings, often well below 1%, so its meltdown hasn't really dragged down fund performance.
TJX, though? It carries meaningful exposure in the 1.5% to 5% range across many of those same funds, giving ETFs a subtle but steady boost from the off-price retailer's strength.
Take the VanEck Retail ETF (RTH), where TJX holds comfortably more than 5% of the weight among heavyweights like Amazon Inc (AMZN) and Walmart Inc (WMT).
The SPDR S&P Retail ETF (XRT) treats all retailers equally, and TJX's outperformance has become a mild tailwind. Meanwhile, the Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLY) barely holds Target at all, but maintains a much more significant TJX position at over 4%.
That weighting advantage doesn't tell the whole story, but it reinforces what the market already believes: off-price retail looks like a safer bet than the middle-income discretionary model that's struggling at Target.
The Numbers Don't Lie: Traffic And Tariffs Are Widening The Gap
Recent Placer.ai data reveals that Target's foot traffic fell 2.7% year over year in Q3, with only a modest rebound in October as early holiday promotions launched. TJX is heading in the opposite direction, logging 9.6% foot-traffic growth at HomeGoods and 8.1% at its Marmaxx chains. That's a rare bright spot in a sector defined by cautious consumer spending.
Tariffs are making things worse for Target and better for TJX. The off-price retailer's flexible sourcing model lets it replenish inventory opportunistically and sidestep tariff-driven costs.
Target, meanwhile, faces higher tariff exposure, a margin risk that Bank of America's Robert Ohmes highlighted as part of his Underperform rating. With digital sales growth now slowing and merchandising challenges piling up, analysts see mounting longer-term sales and margin risks for Target relative to off-price competitors.
Can Target's Next CEO Turn Things Around?
Incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke insists there's a path to win "regardless of how the macro environment evolves," and Target plans to boost capital spending by 25% in 2026 to overhaul stores and sharpen merchandising.
But with consumers shifting decisively toward value and foot traffic data making that trend unmistakable, ETFs seem comfortable leaning into their built-in tilt toward TJX, the retailer benefiting from the trade-down wave, rather than Target, which is still trying to outrun it. For now, the ETF market's message is straightforward: off-price is winning, Target is wobbling, and fund weightings suggest investors already know it.