Target Corp.'s chief executive, Brian Cornell, will stay with the company at least three more years, a step necessitating a change in its retirement rules, the company said Wednesday.
The news came with word that one of Target's top logistics executives is leaving just months after an inventory glut became the biggest problem of Cornell's eight-year tenure.
Arthur Valdez, 52, joined Target as chief supply chain and logistics officer in 2016 after years at Amazon.com. Target described his departure as a retirement and said he will continue to play an advisory role through next April.
"Arthur brought deep expertise to Target, and his leadership drove significant innovation across our supply chain, fueling Target's omnichannel growth," Cornell said in a statement.
Valdez will be succeeded by Gretchen McCarthy, a senior vice president of global inventory management who has worked at Target for nearly two decades.
Valdez first signaled to Target executives that he was interested in leaving the firm in 2021, well before the company's inventory ballooned this spring, a company spokeswoman said.

Cornell, 63, committed to remain as chief executive for approximately three more years. Target didn't specify if Cornell could stay past that time.
With Cornell's decision, Target's board of directors eliminated its retirement policy, which had required a discussion of retirement once a CEO or other top leader reached the age of 65.