For much of the pandemic, Target Corp. turned insatiable demand into record growth. But Wednesday, executives at the Minneapolis company had to explain a significant drop in profit.
Target's profit fell 90% in the May-through-July period as the company cut prices and canceled orders to get rid of items that weren't selling. It warned in June that inventory had grown out of hand.
"The vast majority of the financial impact of these inventory actions is now behind us," Target CEO Brian Cornell said.
Target said it earned $183 million, or 39 cents a diluted share, for its second fiscal quarter. That was 33 cents below the consensus forecast of analysts. Revenue grew 3.5% to $26 billion. Its shares fell 2.7% on the news.
Target reduced $1.5 billion of orders for discretionary products planned for the fall. Even so, its inventory at the end of the quarter was $15.3 billion, up from $15.1 billion three months earlier.
Over-ordering is at the heart of Target's inventory woes. For the past couple of years, it and other retailers bought products in excess to try to get ahead of shipping delays. Target executives attributed a portion of the increase in inventory value to inflation.
"I think everyone had a bit of a glut in inventory ... but Target has seemed to be affected a lot more by this then almost any other retailer out there," Neil Saunders, managing director of the data analytics company GlobalData, said in an interview.
By contrast, Walmart on Tuesday posted quarterly profit growth of more than 20% and said it had reduced its inventory value by more than 2% compared with the spring.