Target Corp (TGT) shares stayed on a rollercoaster ride Thursday morning despite delivering third-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street's expectations. The results highlight a retailer caught between operational improvements and shoppers who remain stubbornly price-conscious.
The Street's reaction? Let's just say analysts aren't exactly singing in harmony.
What the Analysts Are Saying
BofA Securities analyst Robert Ohmes maintained an Underperform rating while slashing his price target from $93 to $80. DA Davidson's Michael Baker reaffirmed his Buy rating with a $108 target. JPMorgan's Christopher Horvers stayed Neutral at $100. Telsey Advisory Group analyst Joseph Feldman kept his Market Perform rating with a $110 price target. And Needham's Robert Drbul reiterated a Neutral stance.
That's a spread from deeply bearish to moderately bullish, which tells you everything about how murky Target's near-term outlook really is.
The Numbers Tell a Mixed Story
Target posted adjusted earnings of $1.78 per share, beating the consensus estimate of $1.72, according to Ohmes. But here's where things get less cheerful: comparable sales dropped 2.7%, significantly worse than the expected 1.8% decline. That breakdown included a 2.2% drop in traffic and a 0.5% decline in average ticket size.
Gross margin came in at 28.2%, slightly below the 28.4% expectation, pressured by higher markdowns. "While we see continued sales softness for TGT, we think recently announced price reductions and merchandising initiatives could help support its perception of value & newness over time," Ohmes noted.
The Real Story: A $5 Billion Bet on the Future
Baker from DA Davidson pointed out that the quarterly results weren't really the main event. The focus was squarely on Target's turnaround strategy. The biggest headline? The company plans to invest an additional $1 billion next year specifically in "merchandising, store efficiency, and technologies centered around AI."
Target has partnered with OpenAI to revamp the shopping experience, a move similar to what Walmart Inc (WMT) announced a few weeks earlier. "We believe agentic commerce will be a consistent theme on retailer's calls," Baker wrote. While expectations are currently subdued, there's now greater clarity on how Target intends to return to growth.
Consumer Weakness Remains the Elephant in the Room
JPMorgan's Horvers characterized the results as mixed, with earnings roughly 3% above expectations but comparable sales declining more than anticipated. Gross margins landed roughly in-line with forecasts, "while SG&A showed solid spending restraint and cost savings," he noted.
Management narrowed their 2025 earnings guidance to $7.00-$8.00 per share from a prior range of $7.00-$9.00. "Importantly, incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke noted that TGT will be investing $5B into its business next year as the company carries out growth strategies," Horvers added.
Feldman from Telsey Advisory highlighted that customers remained value-focused and budget-conscious, creating significant volatility in Target's business. This trend showed up clearly in both third-quarter results and the updated full-year guidance. Sales stayed flat in August and October, but contracted 4% in September.
"Target is making progress on its return to sustainable growth, but visibility remains cloudy on the timing and magnitude of returns, given difficult macro trends and early stages of new initiatives," Feldman wrote.
Diving Deeper Into the Details
Drbul from Needham noted that Target reported total revenue of $25.3 billion, down 1.5% year-over-year. While adjusted earnings beat expectations, they still represented a 4% annual decline.
"Inventory ended the quarter at just under $15 billion, down 2% y/y, but management noted inventory in its frequency categories (which make up ~30% of unit sales) was up in anticipation for holiday demand," he wrote.
The stock traded up 0.64% at $86.63 on Thursday, hovering near its 52-week low of $85.30. That proximity to the bottom tells you the market isn't exactly brimming with confidence, despite the ambitious turnaround plans.
Target's situation boils down to this: the operational pieces of the turnaround are falling into place, but the consumer spending environment remains stubbornly difficult. The company is making the right moves with AI investments and merchandising improvements, but whether shoppers will cooperate by opening their wallets more freely remains the big unknown.