Did you know retail chain Target (TGT -0.75%) is a dividend king? That's right, it has raised its dividend annually for the past 53 years, putting it in an elite group of dividend stocks that are reliable for passive income under almost any circumstances.
Now is an excellent time to test that considering that Target has been in the doldrums lately. Target stock is up 2.5% over the past year, trailing the S&P 500, which is up 27%. Can Target turn around this year? Let's check it out.
What's going wrong at Target?
Target is a discount retailer, but unlike its competitors in this space, it hasn't managed well through inflation. Investors have lost confidence because of its disappointing performance, but that could all be external headwinds. What makes Target's prospects look bleak right now is that its competitors are doing much better, implying that there are internal problems at Target.
You can talk about supply chain issues, inventory management, and a weak consumer. But it looks like the average consumer isn't finding value at Target right now. Target has always been the "upscale" discounter, but it may be losing that customer to Costco Wholesale, whose annual fees attract a certain type of consumer that's willing to pay for it, and it may be losing the value-conscious consumer to Walmart.
Customers are still coming in -- traffic was up 3% in the holiday season, which Target gave an update about last week. Comparable sales (comps) were only 2% in November and December, suggesting even customers who are buying aren't buying as much, or they're switching to cheaper goods. But it's a nice uptick from the fiscal third quarter (ended Nov. 2), when comps were up a meager 0.03%, and it beat expectations.
Can it bounce back this year?
Although the implication is that there's trouble at Target, much of the softness could be attributed to the core Target merchandise model. It sells a lot of dicretionary merchandise, particularly for the home, where customers just aren't spending today. Walmart and Costco has a stronger focus on grocery. So it may not be able to make a strong turnaround until the economy improves.
If customers are coming in but switching down to cheaper products, Target could boost transactions, and sales, in the near term by discounting, again. It did that a few years ago when high inflation first hit and Target had to right its inventory, dragging down profits and creating a pessimistic outlook for investors. That will also lead to a further contraction in its operating margin, which plunged when it started discounting in 2022 and has finally been making progress.
I do want to point out that Target has been here before. It was in bad straits just before the pandemic, and it restructured to a diverse and robust omnichannel strategy that paid off when e-commerce accelerated. It has a 1,800+ base of stores of different sizes and types that service a range of communities and are used as a base for order shipments. These are tremendous assets. It has a first-rate e-commerce system with same-day services in many regions, and same-day sales continue to outpace total growth, up 20% in the third quarter year over year. Total digital sales increased 11%.
Target should benefit from the tailwinds of lower inflation and a consumer that starts to spend if that comes to pass in 2025, and its digital services will continue to deliver value for customers and drive growth.
Value and passive income
At the current price, Target stock trades at a P/E ratio of less than 15. That's objectively cheap, and it's also well-below its 5-year average of 19.
Whether Target rebounds in 2025 or later, that's an excellent value. On top of that, at this price, its dividend yields 3.2%, or more than double the S&P 500 average. Dividend kings don't always have high yields; their value is in their reliability.
If you're looking for an excellent, high-yielding dividend stock, you can buy Target whether or not it will rebound in 2025 for years of passive income. At this price, though, there's a good chance Target stock will begin to climb under better economic conditions. That may or may not happen this year, and this is stock for the value investor with a long-term horizon.