TheStar.com | Business | Target profits decline, but beats expectations
Target profits decline, but beats expectations
Email Story
Report Typo
AddThis

 

Aug 19, 2008 10:15 AM

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – Target Corp. reported a 7.6 per cent drop in second-quarter profit Tuesday as its financially squeezed consumers focused on necessities like milk and paper towels and had trouble making their monthly credit card payments.

The Minneapolis-based discounter said its earnings slipped to US$634 million, or 82 cents per share, for the three-month period ended Aug. 2. That compares with a profit of $686 million, or 81 cents per share, a year earlier.

Sales grew 5.7 per cent to $15 billion from $14.2 billion in the year-ago period. Same-store sales, or sales at stores opened at least a year, slipped 0.4 per cent. Same-store sales are considered a key indicator of a retailer's health.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected a profit of 76 cents per share on revenue of $15.46 billion.

Shares slipped more than 1 per cent, or 64 cents, to $49.41 in morning trading.

Target had for several years outperformed its rival Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, but has been stumbling in recent months largely due to its heavier emphasis on non-essentials like clothing and home furnishings.

The company said that gross profit margin rates fell moderately from last year, because sales grew faster in low-margin categories – which generally include food and essentials like paper goods.

In its credit card operation, Target said it earned $74 million, down 65 per cent from $213 million a year earlier. The drop was due to Target's reduced investment in the portfolio and to a higher bad debt expense resulting from higher writeoffs in the current period and additions to the reserve for the future.

In May, Target closed its transaction to sell 47 per cent of its credit card receivables to JPMorgan Chase for $3.6 billion.

Wal-Mart reported its own results Thursday, raising its full-year earnings forecast after second-quarter profit rose more than expected, helped by tight inventory controls and a renewed focus on low prices. But the company predicted slower same-store sales growth in the U.S. for the current quarter, as the benefits of the federal stimulus checks dry up and customers find it more difficult to stretch their paycheque to the next payday.

Advertisement

Advertisement
SPECIAL
It was just before Christmas in 1970 when a 6-year-old Manny Goncalves came to Canada from his home in Portugal with his parents and younger ...
This week's map shows the top 20 of Ontario's postal areas for driver's licence suspension for impaired driving in 2007. There are ...
John Travolta and Miley Cyrus provide voices for the Disney-Pixar canine comedy Bolt. Read the review and more on our Movies page.