Target CFO talks earnings, inflation, and consumer trends

In This Article:

Target CFO Michael Fiddelke joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the company's fourth quarter earnings, consumer trends amid inflation, and supply chain challenges.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: Target is out with better-than-expected earnings as consumers shopped, shopped, and shopped some more during the holidays. The company is warning on margins for the first quarter. We talked with Target CFO Michael Fiddelke about the quarter and the road ahead.

MICHAEL FIDDELKE: So when you look at the quarter, our 9% growth, the headline I'd leave you with is that it was driven by traffic. Almost all of that growth came from traffic, and so that means consumers with their feet and their clicks picking Target more often. And so that's an incredibly healthy sign for our business. If you step back and look over the last two years, we've now crossed the $100 billion threshold as a retailer, grown by over 35%, $27 billion over two years, and so we see a lot of strength in the business and that gives us confidence as we look ahead to grow next year too.

BRIAN SOZZI: As a CFO of Target, does inflation keep you up at night?

MICHAEL FIDDELKE: We certainly are watching the inflationary cost environment closely. But I'll tell you, Brian, where we tackle that challenge is through the lens of our guests, and we're focused on protecting value. We have a lot of levers we can pull in our business to combat inflation, and price is the lever we pull last not first.

So making sure our guests find incredible value at Target is our focus day in and day out. You can see the evidence of that in costs going up faster than retails at Target, and it's working. That traffic growth that we saw in Q4 is a testament to guests finding Target with more and more engagement over time.

BRIAN SOZZI: But out of the many other things you should be worried about is inflation. You know, there's also life, et cetera, et cetera. But yes. First quarter-- you mentioned that operating margins will be well below last year. What's driving that?

MICHAEL FIDDELKE: Yeah, there's some unique things in last year's results that I think is going to make profit choppy quarter by quarter. But if you step out from the quarter-to-quarter volatility, the thing that I'm encouraged by is the growth we expect on the year. We expect to grow the top line. We expect to grow the bottom line, and the thing powering that growth is our investments.

We'll remodel more stores. We'll open more new stores. We'll invest in some of those fulfillment services that guests have come to love. Drive-up is a perfect example of that, where we launched that service several years ago. We've made it better over time, adding fresh and frozen products that we didn't have in the assortments to start with. And as we listen to our guests, they've said, gosh, it would be great to get a Starbucks as I complete that drive-up order, and so that's something we'll be testing this year too.