Target’s spiffy results signal return to pre-pandemic shopping habits

US shoppers returning to stores ahead of the back-to-school season helped Target forecast higher same-store sales growth after beating quarterly estimates on Wednesday, even as online demand sharply dropped from pandemic highs.

Traffic rose about 13 percent in the second quarter, in sharp contrast from a year ago when customers mainly relied on the company’s speedy delivery services for their shopping needs.

Along with larger rival Walmart’s results from a day earlier, Target signaled a return to pre-pandemic behavior among US shoppers as vaccinations and eased restrictions encourage more people to step out.

“We believe that America still embraces stores and the traffic we are seeing tell us that stores continue to play an important role,” Target’s Chief Executive Officer Brian Cornell said.

Smartphone used to coordinate in-store pickup
Online shopping and car-side pickup gave Target a boost during the height of the pandemic, but now in-store shopping is on the rise.
Gado via Getty Images

Executives also signaled a “meaningful” change in the use of online services, citing a 55 percent rise in same-day offerings such as in-store pickup and Drive Up while sales on orders shipped directly to home fell.

Digital comparable sales rose 10 percent, against the 195 percent jump a year earlier and 50 percent in the first quarter. Total comparable sales rose by a better-than-expected 8.9 percent.

This makes for the second healthy quarter in a row for Target, which reported surging profits in the first quarter.

The retailer projected high single-digit sales growth for the second half of the year, betting on the strong start to the back-to-school season, at a time when supply chain disruptions, higher labor costs and the fast-spreading Delta variant threaten an economic recovery.

“The main risk for Target (and much of retail right now) is rising input costs and pass through power given the competitive environment. .. Target’s productivity initiatives and sales leverage should enable them to show an attractive return,” Evercore analyst Greg Melich said.

Target’s Cornell said the company was not seeing any adjustment in consumer behavior so far due to Delta.

Shares of Target, which announced a new $15 billion share repurchase program, slipped 1 percent, having gained about 45 percent this year.

Locally, Target leased 31,000 square feet at One Court Square in June for a new store in Long Island City.

Despite Wednesday’s impressive results, shares of Target were trading down 1.8 percent, at $250.12 in mid-afternoon trading.

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