Target and Walmart earnings have some ‘common patterns,’ analyst says

Jefferies Managing Director of Consumer Research Steph Wissink joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss first-quarter earnings for Target, consumer demand, inflation, and the outlook for growth.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: And as we were just talking about, a rare miss at Target and how. The retailer disappointing on earnings this morning, the shares plunging by 25%. And Target citing what it says were unexpectedly high costs that hit profitability. It is set to raise prices for consumers, to some degree. Let's dive into these earnings with Steph Wissink, Jefferies managing director of consumer research. Steph, it's great to see you to help us sort of make sense of this report on top of Walmart yesterday. What's your takeaway here? How painful is this going to be for Target, for how long?

STEPHANIE WISSINK: Yeah, it's great to see you as well. And I am sorry I'm not bringing better news. It has been a wild 48 hours in retail. We heard from Walmart yesterday, Target today. And I think one of the things that really stood out to us was just the common patterns. We're seeing both companies are signaling that their stores are seeing stronger traffic versus ecom. Both companies are seeing higher costs to execute their business. Consumers are reshaping their behavior, so moving more towards essentials versus discretion.

And I think the last thing is just that this is not going to abate any time soon. I think there were a lot of conversations among investors that maybe inflation for the consumer has peaked. But these two companies are giving us very different signals that we're still seeing costs rising faster than prices and more pricing is to come. So for Target specifically, and I think Walmart saw the same thing, when they're placing orders six months in advance, they're looking at very different consumer conditions in the back half of last year.

Pretty strong consumer with stimulus. Now that consumer is making some very distinct changes in their behavior, and that is affecting these discretionary categories. So a lot of excess inventory, and I would throw Amazon in there, too. When you look at inventory levels across these big three power retailers, very, very high relative to current sales patterns. So we are going to see some inventory release. And that's going to come through markdowns and discounts. And I think it was interesting, as you pointed out, TJ Maxx looking strong today. They are going to be a buyer of some of this dislocated inventory.

BRIAN SOZZI: Steph, Brian here. This was-- I mean, these are brutal calls. And now today, we didn't see the moves yesterday. I think folks are waiting to get these Target results. But look, Best Buy shares right now getting slaughtered. Costco, slaughtered. Dollar General, slaughtered. Dollar Tree under pressure. Is it reasonable to expect all of these companies to post very bad earnings reports of their own, just based on what we have heard from Walmart and Target?