Business
Target beats Wall Street estimates, hikes sales outlook as shoppers start to return
Target on Wednesday posted earnings and revenue that beat Wall Street expectations, and reported that net sales grew more than 6% year over year as the retailer tries to win back customers amid slumping sales.
Target’s same-store sales jumped 5.6%, its first positive same-store sales number in five quarters.
The retailer said it saw broad-based strength across its categories, with traffic across stores and digital platforms growing 4.4% compared with the fiscal first quarter last year. Digital comparable sales increased 8.9%, growth the company attributed to same-day delivery through its membership, Target Circle 360.
“Even with this early progress, we know our work is just beginning, and we have confidence we’re on the right path because guests are responding in areas where we are leaning in and driving change,” CEO Michael Fiddelke said on a call with reporters. “These are areas where we bring style, design, and value to not only the products we sell, but how we sell them, creating a distinctly Target experience.”
Notably, nonmerchandise sales spiked nearly 25%, including from what the company identified as strong growth in its membership revenue and the Target+ marketplace. Target, like Walmart and Amazon, has tried to grow those business units both to offer more convenience to customers and boost its profits.
The company said it saw sales increase across all six of its core merchandising categories, with particularly strong responses from consumers in its health and wellness, toys, and baby segments. It opened seven new stores in the fiscal first quarter, with more than 100 remodel projects in progress.
Here’s what the retailer reported for its fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: $1.71 vs. $1.46 expected
- Revenue: $25.44 billion vs. $24.64 billion expected
As it reported the first-quarter beats, Target also hiked its full-year revenue outlook. The retailer said it expects net sales growth of 4% compared with 2025, an increase of 2 percentage points from its prior outlook. It also expects its earnings per share to come in near the high end of its previously provided guidance range of $7.50 to $8.50. Analysts were expecting earnings of $8.14 per share.
“Despite our updated guidance, we’re maintaining a cautious outlook given the work we know we have in front of us and ongoing uncertainty in the macroeconomic environment,” Fiddelke told reporters.
Shares of the company rose slightly in premarket trading.
For the three-month period that ended May 2, Target reported net income of $781 million, or $1.71 per share, down from $1.04 billion, or $2.27 per share, in the year-ago period. Adjusted earnings per share were $1.30 in the year-ago period.
It reported merchandise revenue of $24.89 billion, beating estimates of $24.18 billion. Target’s revenue beat reported Wednesday was the largest since November 2021.
Some of Target’s strongest strength this quarter was in its baby and kids category, Fiddelke told reporters, with a more than 5 percentage point acceleration in the second half of the quarter, in addition to product additions in the health and wellness category that drove double-digit sales growth in that segment.
Target’s gross margin came in at 29% for the first quarter, compared with Wall Street estimates of 28.7%.
The company has been struggling as it works to prove to investors that it can end its sales slump and win back brand loyalty from consumers. Wednesday’s earnings come as Wall Street keeps a keen eye on a more selective consumer, hit by soaring gas prices and macroeconomic uncertainty.
Despite high gas prices and an overall pullback in discretionary spending, executives said the consumer continues to show interest in new items that Target is bringing into its assortment.
“We see a consumer that continues to be resilient, even though they faced a mix of headwinds and tailwinds in the first quarter,” Fiddelke said.
Target said it’s focused on improving its merchandising, guest experience and technology as it hopes to return to sustainable growth.
CFO Jim Lee said in March that Target would increase its spending this year to accelerate its turnaround, with capital expenditures totaling about $5 billion for the year, a more than $1 billion increase from last fiscal year. Those investments will go toward its supply chain and investment in its stores, among other areas.
For the current fiscal second quarter, Target said its key priorities include what it called its “largest food and beverage transition” in more than a decade, in addition to launching the Target Beauty Studio across more than 600 stores and overhauling nearly 75% of decorative accessories.
“We will not confuse this progress with potential,” Fiddelke said. “Our focus is on delivering consistent growth, not just in 2026 but for decades to come.”
Lee told reporters the company is “working through the process” of applying for tariff refunds and acknowledged that the tariff environment remains dynamic. He said it’s early to determine how policy changes are affecting margins.
Business
Skydo among first to get cross border payments licence in Gift City
Mumbai: Skydo, a cross-border payments platform for Indian exporters/businesses, is among the first to receive in-principle approval to operate as a cross-border Payment Service Provider at GIFT City IFSC.The GIFT City presence plugs Skydo into a globally-aligned finance hub built for cross-border flows. It unlocks build-for-global infra/products tailored to firms selling, buying, operating abroad. These include Indian MSMEs and startups selling abroad, freelancers and consultants. Indian firms can now receive from global clients and pay overseas vendors/software partners via a compliant, streamlined stack.The approval widens scope of servies as Skydo can provide besides multi-currency collections, e-money accounts, merchant acquisition amd open up new payment corridors.For Indian businesses this allows them to tighten pay-outs without too many intermediaries and widen pay-ins; it cut friction, speed cycles and turns cross-border ops to one-window flow. Skydo also cleared RBI’s PA-CB rails—outward flows approval, plus earlier final nod for export collections. Net-net: both sides covered.Co-founder & CEO Srivatsan Sridhar said GIFT City is a key step in building globally-competitive infra. Co-founder Movin Jain said dual frameworks bring clarity and flexibility which are fuel for compliant innovation.
Business
Examples of where inflation eased in April – and where it accelerated
Falls last month in the cost of energy and air travel – along with an easing of inflation across a range of everyday groceries including chocolate, coffee and rice – helped pull down the UK’s overall rate to its lowest level since spring 2025.
Electricity bills in April were on average 6.0% lower than a year ago.
This is a sharp turnaround from March, when they were up year on year by 5.6%.
Gas bills were already down 2.8% on the year in March, but in April they recorded an even larger drop, averaging 13.5% below where they stood 12 months ago, according to data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The falls are a result of Ofgem lowering its energy price cap from the start of April by 7%, or £10 a month, for the average household using both electricity and gas, in response to measures announced by the Government to cut the cost of bills.
A steep drop in air fares also helped ease the overall rate of inflation.
The average cost of air travel was down 13.2% year on year in April, following a jump of 14.5% in March, reflecting the early timing of this year’s Easter holidays.
A wide range of groceries recorded an smaller annual increase in price last month than in March, including chocolate, mineral water, ready meals, coffee, meat, tea, rice and bread.
The same was true for the cost of tickets to cinemas, theatres, concerts and museums, while train fares swung from a positive rate of inflation in March of 1.9% to a fall of 0.2% in April.
There were also smaller rises in water and sewerage bills than a year ago.
All of these factors were more than enough to offset the upwards pressures on inflation last month, led by a sharp rise in the cost of fuel.
The average price of petrol in April was 16.6% higher than 12 months ago, compared with a much smaller year on year on increase of 2.0% in March.
Diesel saw an even bigger jump, from an annual inflation rate of 9.6% in March to 34.1% in April.
The steep increases reflect the ongoing impact of the Iran war, which began at the end of February and prompted a spike in the price of crude oil during March, in turn boosting the cost of filling up at the pumps.
Inflation also picked up pace in April for a handful of everyday groceries, including pasta, fish, potatoes and breakfast cereals.
The average cost of staying in hotels and similar accommodation was 3.8% higher in April than 12 months earlier, compared with a year on year rise of just 0.8% in March.
Below are some examples of how the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation rate has eased or accelerated.
Two figures are listed for each item: the average rise in price in the 12 months to March, followed by the average rise in price in the 12 months to April.
– Examples where annual inflation has eased, ranked by the size of change:
Passenger air travel: March up 14.5%, April down 13.2%Water supply: March up 26.4%, April up 9.0%Electricity: March up 5.6%, April down 6.0%Gas: March down 2.8%, April down 13.5%Margarine: March up 3.1%, April down 1.4%Chocolate: March up 10.9%, April up 7.8%Mineral or spring waters: March up 9.4%, April up 6.3%Ready-made meals: March up 6.7%, April up 3.9%Coffee: March up 9.0%, April up 6.3%Cinemas, theatres, concerts: March up 7.4%, April up 5.2%Meat: March up 5.8%, April up 3.6%Tea: March up 6.7%, April up 4.6%Bread: March up 3.3%, April up 2.0%
– Examples where annual inflation has accelerated
Diesel: March up 9.6%, April up 34.1%Petrol: March up 2.0%, April up 16.6%Hotels/other accommodation: March up 0.8%, April up 3.8%Sauces, spices & culinary herbs: March up 2.6%, April up 4.9%Pasta & couscous: March up 4.4%, April up 6.1%Men’s clothes: March up 0.2%, April up 1.6%Fish: March up 4.5%, April up 5.7%Crisps: March up 0.3%, April up 1.5%Women’s clothes: March up 0.9%, April up 2.0%Potatoes: March up 0.5%, April up 1.5%
Business
UK inflation falls to 2.8% – but experts warn far higher price rises on the way
Inflation fell for the first time this year in April, official statistics show – but economists warn this is merely the calm before the storm.
The Office for National Statistics reported on Wednesday morning that annual consumer price rises fell from 3.3 per cent in March to 2.8 per cent in April.
That’s largely because government measures to lower energy costs kicked in, helping lower household bills, if only temporarily.
In response to fresh inflation data from the ONS, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said: “The war in Iran is not our war but one we will need to respond to, and the decisions I took in the Budget last year have kept inflation down as we deal with global instability.
“We have the right economic plan, and to change course now would risk our economic stability and leave working people worse off.
“We have already taken £117 off energy bills, frozen rail fares, and lifted the two-child limit, and over today and tomorrow I’ll set out the next phase of how we will support UK households.”
But economists fear the drop in inflation may be short-lived. Suren Thiru, chief economist at chartered accountants institute the ICAEW, said: “April’s slowdown is a final interlude before the inflation storm sparked by the Iran war hits as the Ofgem energy price cap reduction, aided by the chancellor’s cut to green levies, temporarily lowered the headline rate.
“This decline is probably the last inflation fall for this year as surging fuel and food prices will probably haul it close to 4 per cent this summer, while any escalation of the conflict in Iran opens the door to CPI hitting 5 per cent.”
Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said: “The problem with today’s inflation data is that it is backwards looking and households struggling to stretch their budgets to fit the rest of the year are hyper aware that the picture painted by April’s numbers is a rose-tinted anomaly. Whilst motorists have already experienced a hefty rise in the price they’ve been paying at the pump, the true impact of the energy price shock created by the Iran war will take a few months to really work its way through the system.”
Rising prices are the top financial concern for UK households, recent surveys show.
S&P Global’s consumer sentiment index figure dropped to 42.1 in May, from 42.3 in April, the lowest level since July 2023 when inflation in the UK was soaring as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
On Tuesday, the UK unemployment rate rose to 5 per cent in the three months to March from 4.9 per cent. That could also be a sign of further job cuts to come as employers look to cut costs.
Ms Hewson said on inflation: “April’s figures are further skewed by the energy price cap, which includes a big dollop of government help as it shifts the burden of renewables onto general taxation and away from bills. Put simply, this is the calm before a summer storm with energy bills, food prices and a whole host of other costs expected to shoot up over the coming months. With wage growth slowing in a tepid labour market to boot, things are likely to feel tough for a lot of people still reeling from their last brush with high inflation.”
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