Today: 10 April 2026
Target Shocks Workers: 1,000 HQ Jobs Cut Before Christmas – Retail Giant’s Woes Deepen
24 October 2025
5 mins read

Target Shocks Workers: 1,000 HQ Jobs Cut Before Christmas – Retail Giant’s Woes Deepen

  • Major Cuts: Target will cut about 1,000 corporate jobs and eliminate 800 open roles – roughly 8% of its HQ workforce axios.com foxbusiness.com. This is the retailer’s first big layoff in a decade economictimes.indiatimes.com.
  • CEO’s Message: Incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke says the reorganization will make Target “stronger, faster and better positioned” for the future axios.com foxbusiness.com. He urged employees to work remotely next week while teams learn who is affected economictimes.indiatimes.com.
  • Sales Slump: Target has been struggling with falling sales and internal missteps. Critics note inventory issues and customer complaints (long lines, empty shelves) have hurt holiday shopping axios.com ts2.tech. A recent pullback from diversity programs also led to consumer backlash, and three straight quarters of sales declines eng.pressbee.net economictimes.indiatimes.com.
  • Market Reaction: Target shares were around $94 on Oct 23, 2025, near five-year lows and down about 30–35% this year ts2.tech. By contrast, Walmart (Target’s big rival) hit new highs on an AI strategy, with analysts noting a “resilient customer” is still buying smart ts2.tech.
  • Holiday Outlook: Retailers warn of a muted holiday season. U.S. holiday sales growth is projected at only +2–3% this year (versus +4.2% last year) ts2.tech, and online sales are expected to grow just ~5.3% ts2.tech. Experts say consumers are “dealing with a lot in the broader economy” and will hunt for deeper discounts reuters.com ts2.tech.

Layoffs Details & Rationale

Target announced on Oct. 23 that its Twin Cities headquarters will shed about 1,000 corporate positions and close another 800 open jobs axios.com foxbusiness.com. About 80% of the cuts are U.S.-based, mostly managers foxbusiness.com. The company says this eliminates roughly 8% of HQ staff and is aimed at speeding up decision-making. “To better serve our guests, we’re prioritizing the need to work faster and reduce the complexity that has been created over time,” Fiddelke told employees foxbusiness.com axios.com. He wrote that “the truth is, the complexity we’ve created over time has been holding us back” – too many layers and overlapping roles have slowed innovation foxbusiness.com.

Affected employees will be paid through early January and may receive severance packages axios.com. All U.S. corporate staff were instructed to work from home next week for confidentiality and efficiency economictimes.indiatimes.com axios.com. The cuts – one of Target’s biggest corporate shake-ups – come just weeks after the company delayed a return-to-office mandate, citing employee uncertainty axios.com.

Target stresses this is not primarily a cost-cutting move. A spokesman told CNN that layoffs were “a step to rewire our organization” so decisions happen more quickly economictimes.indiatimes.com. In other words, management presents the cuts as a restructuring rather than belt-tightening – though analysts worry about the company’s troubled turnaround.

Struggles Behind the Cuts

Retail analysts say Target has fallen behind rivals on pricing and merchandise. GlobalData’s Neil Saunders noted in August that Target’s value perception and inventory execution have suffered – customers often find empty shelves and long checkout lines, especially at clothing and home departments axios.com ts2.tech. The company’s 2025 sales have been weak: second-quarter comparable sales fell 1.9% YoY, and profit margins hit a five-year low ts2.tech. Target’s own reports blame this on heavy markdowns and canceled orders.

Part of the slowdown stems from a consumer backlash. In early 2025 Target pulled back certain diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, triggering boycott calls among some customers axios.com eng.pressbee.net. Foot-traffic data suggest store visits have lagged since that controversy began. Meanwhile, rising costs from new tariffs have pressured all retailers, and Target may feel them acutely given its model of curated, often discretionary goods.

Fiddelke – a 20-year company veteran set to become CEO in early 2026 – replaces Brian Cornell (who announced in August he will step down). Some investors say swapping one internal leader for another is no cure-all. GlobalData’s Saunders warned that an insider chief “does not necessarily remedy the problems of entrenched groupthink” at Target ts2.tech. Shareholder Charles Sizemore (who recently sold his stake) bluntly predicted “no turnaround will be happening on a reasonable timeline” ts2.tech. In short, many market-watchers say Target must fix fundamentals (inventory, pricing, customer experience) before growth can return ts2.tech ts2.tech.

Stock, Dividends & Analyst View

Investors have punished Target’s stock this year. By late October the shares hovered around $94 ts2.tech, roughly 30% below where they started 2025 (and about 23% below their price five years ago ts2.tech). Target is still a Dividend King with 54 straight years of raises, yielding nearly 5% ts2.tech – the highest payout in a decade. That high yield draws income investors, but analysts caution any price gains may take time.

Wall Street is mixed. About 38 analysts rate Target a Hold, with an average 12-month price target near $109 ts2.tech – roughly 15% above today’s level. Some bullish forecasts exist (Morgan Stanley’s model targets ~$160, for example ts2.tech), but others are skeptical. Bernstein, RBC and even former Target bulls at CFRA have turned cautious or downgraded the stock. TS2 (TechStock²) notes that, on average, analysts foresee minimal sales growth and only modest profit gains in the near term ts2.tech ts2.tech.

By contrast, Walmart’s stock is near its 52-week high (around $107) on optimism about technology and e-commerce initiatives ts2.tech. Nearly all analysts rate Walmart a Buy, with average 12-month targets in the low $110s (implying ~10% upside) ts2.tech. The consensus forecast for Walmart is steady mid-single-digit growth next year ts2.tech, making it a more “defensive” choice. TS2 summarizes: “Walmart is seen as a core defensive retail holding…most analysts expect mid-single-digit growth ahead” ts2.tech ts2.tech. Target, in contrast, is viewed more as a speculative turnaround – its cheap valuation and 5%-plus yield may reward investors if Fiddelke can revive traffic, but many say patience is required ts2.tech ts2.tech.

Broader Retail Context & Holiday Forecast

Target’s announcement comes amid a broader industry slowdown. Several major retailers have issued tepid forecasts for the holiday season. Surveys and analytics firms predict U.S. holiday retail sales will grow only ~2–3% in 2025 (versus +4.2% last year) ts2.tech, while online sales are projected up just 5–6% ts2.tech reuters.com. Data firm Adobe notes shoppers are “dealing with a lot in the broader economy” and are leaning on big sales events for deals reuters.com. For example, Adobe forecasts only 5.3% growth in holiday e‑commerce spending, down from 8.7% last year reuters.com.

Despite the gloom, some retailers have raised guidance. Walmart and Macy’s say they expect a better season, while Target and Best Buy are holding forecasts steady reuters.com. Analysts warn shoppers will trade down or postpone big purchases, which tends to favor discounters. Walmart’s moves (like a high-profile ChatGPT integration and the new “Circle Week” sale) have boosted sentiment ts2.tech ts2.tech. Target’s strategy will need to adjust: it’s known for more premium, design-forward goods – a strength in good times but a vulnerability when consumers hunt bargains. One analyst quipped that Target “used to be very attuned to consumer demand” but lately “has lost its grip on delivering for the American shopper” ts2.tech.

Outlook & Expert Commentary

Most experts see Target’s path forward as challenging. The TS2 analysis warns that big turnaround gains may not be imminent. “Consensus forecasts assume modest continued gains…Target’s beaten-down price still remains on value investors’ radar,” but only if inventory and merchandising issues are fixed first ts2.tech ts2.tech. Some value investors note that if Target regains traffic, the stock could jump double digits, thanks to its low valuation and fat dividend ts2.tech.

Looking ahead, forecasts for the coming year are cautious. If the restructuring works, analysts expect up to ~10–20% total returns (including dividends) in the best case ts2.tech, but they stress the need to “get shoppers back into stores” first ts2.tech. In the words of Adobe’s Pandya, consumers are still hunting bargains and using online shopping as a discount lever reuters.com. With inflation pressures cooling only gradually, retailers face a delicate balancing act of clearing inventory while preserving margins. In sum, Target’s layoffs are a signal of deep-seated issues. The company’s cheap stock and high yield make it a contrarian play, but analysts say the turnaround will require clear execution and a patient market.

Sources: Company and analyst statements, Reuters, Axios, Fox Business, TechStock² analysis economictimes.indiatimes.com foxbusiness.com axios.com ts2.tech reuters.com ts2.tech. (Data as of Oct. 24, 2025.)

A technology and finance expert writing for TS2.tech. He analyzes developments in satellites, telecommunications, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on their impact on global markets. Author of industry reports and market commentary, often cited in tech and business media. Passionate about innovation and the digital economy.

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