The retail parade continues Tuesday morning, when Target
The company already reported preliminary third-quarter comps of down 1.6% (with October essentially flat at down 0.1%) and noted that traffic finally turned up in September and continued the trend in October. Back-to-school and apparel sales were encouraging, but Target is still seeing a lower average ticket as the consumer retrenches. Declining food prices remain a headwind. Management is telegraphing a flat comp for November, but analysts are likely to be very nervous given the traffic slowdown in the back half of October and the guide-downs from most other prominent retailers.
Margins are likely come in ahead of expectations, as Target has been less promotional. More apparel in the mix and lower transport costs will help as well, but more consumables in the mix are offsetting some of these gains. Beauty, health care and personal categories have been particularly strong. Similar to every retailer, Target should show some SG&A leverage as expense-control initiatives bite.
Analysts will focus on credit results, due to concerns about the health of consumer balance sheets. Credit revenue should be down on lower interest rates, but lower charge-offs and bad debt expense should keep investors happy. Analysts expect credit expense to be down over 10% on the year.
Looking to the longer term, investors will seek a progress report on the PFresh initiative to update the store format. Given the size of the chain, this is a huge multiyear undertaking, which should take three or more years to complete. Given the weaker retail environment, investors will want to know that capex plans are still in place for the 300-plus stores that should be remodeled this coming year.
The call starts at 10:30 a.m. EST.
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