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Target rattles market with quarter, outlook

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – Target reported a 43 percent drop in fourth-quarter profit and weak store sales overshadowed an improving online performance. Its outlook for the first quarter and all of 2017 were far below what industry analysts had been expecting.

The Minneapolis company warned early this year about what was to come after a disappointing holiday season, but investors were still rattled by the numbers released Tuesday.

For 2017, Target Corp. anticipates an adjusted profit of $3.80 to $4.20 per share. That’s wasn’t even close to the per-share earnings of $5.32 that Wall Street was projecting, according to a poll of analysts by FactSet.

Neither was Target’s first-quarter profit projection of between 80 cents and $1. Analysts, according to FactSet, expected $1.33 per share.

For the three months ended Jan. 28, Target earned $817 million, or $1.46 per share. Stripping out certain items, earnings were $1.45 per share, or 5 cents less per share than industry analysts had projected, according to analysts polled by Zacks Investment Research.

The quarter’s profit came in well below the $1.43 billion, or $2.31 per share, the company reported last year.

Sales dropped to $20.69 billion, from $21.63 billion last year, and were also short of Wall Street projections.

Sales at stores open at least a year, a key measure of a retailer’s health, fell 1.5 percent. It was the third consecutive quarter of declines.

All traditional retailers have struggled as Amazon.com and other online retailers draw shoppers away, but Target has been unable to match the strategy of competitors like Walmart Stores Inc., which posted another quarter of higher customer traffic and same-store sales. Online sales for the Bentonville, Ark., store surged 29 percent.

Still, other Target rivals are hurting.

Last week, J.C. Penney swung to a profit for the fourth quarter, but total sales fell slightly. Comparable-store-sales declined a bit and the company issued a conservative forecast.

Kohl’s Corp. reported a lower fourth-quarter profit and total sales declined. Revenue at stores open at least a year dropped 2.2 percent.

Earnings at Macy’s, the nation’s largest department store chain, slid 13 percent.

Under Target Chairman and CEO Brian Cornell, Target has pushed aggressively online and increased the number of stores that ship directly to online shoppers to match Amazon’s two-day free deliveries for customers.

But weak sales at its stores is not going be fixed easily.

“Our fourth quarter results reflect the impact of rapidly-changing consumer behavior, which drove very strong digital growth but unexpected softness in our stores,” Cornell said in a company release.

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