NEW YORK – As Target Corp. continues to reel from the shift to online shopping, executives at the Minneapolis-based retailer dramatically walked back their previous goals for growth and said this year instead would be focused on making significant investments for the future.
Target said Tuesday it will spend $2 billion this year and a total of $7 billion over three years to support its plans, which include price reductions to get more people into stores.
Other initiatives — including remodeling stores, launching more private label brands and opening more small format stores — already were in the works. But CEO Brian Cornell said Tuesday the retailer feels a renewed sense of urgency to quicken the pace of those changes and roll them out more quickly.
"We're investing to win share — not surrendering," said Cornell, contrasting his plan with other retailers that have been shuttering stores. "There will be winners and losers in this new era in retail. This plan is all about coming out on top."
Target executives asked Wall Street for patience during the company's annual investors meeting, at which they laid out a road map for the coming year.
They warned that the retailer will take some financial lumps along the way, including a likely low single-digit decline in comparable-store sales this year instead of the previous goal of growing as much as 3 percent.
The lowered forecast — on the heels of disappointing fourth quarter earnings announced in the morning — stunned investors who sent the company's shares down 12 percent Tuesday, the biggest one-day decline since 2008.
"I don't really see the thing that's going to move the needle," said Amy Koo, an analyst with Kantar Retail. "Their strategies aren't really different from what they were before" except for lowering prices.