TGT in one paragraph
TGT is the NYSE ticker for Target Corporation, a US retailer running roughly 1,960 large-format stores and generating around $107 billion in annual revenue. Roughly 55% of sales are discretionary categories like apparel, home, beauty, electronics, and toys, which makes TGT the higher-beta counterweight to Walmart inside the consumer-staples shelf. Owned brands generate around $30 billion a year, Roundel ad revenue is over $1.5 billion, and the company has raised its dividend for 53 consecutive years, putting it in the Dividend King club. At LHFX you trade TGT as a CFD on the share price, long or short, with up to 1:20 leverage and a $3 per side commission.
What Target Corporation actually sells
Target runs roughly 1,960 large-format stores across the United States and produces around $107 billion in annual sales. The merchandise mix is the single most important fact about the stock. Around 55% of revenue comes from discretionary categories such as apparel, home, beauty, electronics, and toys, with the remaining 45% in groceries and household essentials. Walmart is roughly the inverse, weighted to groceries. That mix is why TGT and WMT report similar comp-sales numbers in good cycles and divergent comp-sales numbers in bad ones.
Owned and exclusive brands are the margin engine. Cat & Jack kids apparel, Good & Gather grocery, Threshold home, and A New Day women's apparel together generate roughly $30 billion in annual sales and carry materially higher gross margins than national-brand merchandise. Roundel, Target's in-house retail media network, has scaled past $1.5 billion in annual revenue and is the highest-incremental-margin business hidden inside the income statement. Target Plus, the curated third-party marketplace, has been growing faster than first-party digital in recent quarters.
Digital fulfilment is around 18 to 20% of total sales, dominated by Drive Up and order pickup. Drive Up alone is a multi-billion-dollar revenue line and one of the highest-margin digital fulfilment methods in US retail because the customer brings the cost of last-mile to the store parking lot. Target has not closed the digital gap with Walmart, but the unit economics of the digital methods it has chosen are structurally stronger.
Why this matters for the stock. A 55% discretionary mix is the reason TGT trades with higher beta than WMT, KO, or PG. The same US consumer-confidence shift moves apparel and home spending by multiples of grocery spending, so Target's quarterly comps swing harder in both directions. Treat TGT as a consumer cyclical even though it shares the same store footprint as a defensive staple.
Where Target makes its money
Target does not disclose segment-level profit, but the revenue lines that move the operating margin are well understood. The breakdown below uses the most recent fiscal-year figures and the management commentary that comes with each quarterly print.
| Revenue line | What it sells | Approx share or scale |
|---|---|---|
| MERCHANDISE-MIX | Discretionary categories (apparel, home, beauty, electronics, toys) | ~55% of total revenue |
| OWNED-BRANDS | Owned and exclusive brands (Cat & Jack, Good & Gather, Threshold, A New Day) | ~$30B annual sales, higher gross margin than national brands |
| ROUNDEL | Roundel retail media network (advertising sold to suppliers) | $1.5B+ revenue, highest incremental margin in the P&L |
| TARGET-PLUS | Target Plus curated third-party marketplace | Growing faster than first-party digital; fee-based |
| DIGITAL | Digital sales (Drive Up, order pickup, Shipt same-day) | ~18 to 20% of total sales |
| MEMBERSHIP | Target Circle 360 paid membership (free same-day shipping) | Newer revenue line; subscription-style economics |
Operating margin tells you which line is winning. Roundel and owned brands lift gross margin, while clearance markdowns on discretionary inventory compress it. The quarterly transcript almost always names the largest driver explicitly.
Earnings cadence and how the market reacts
Target reports on fiscal quarters that end one month before the calendar quarter, so the four prints arrive in late February, mid-May, mid-August, and mid-November, always before the US market open. Walmart reports one to two weeks earlier in the retail calendar, so the WMT comp-sales number gives you a directional read on the US consumer that markets price into TGT before the actual Target results land.
Four lines on the print move the stock more than the headline EPS beat. Comp sales split between traffic and ticket tell you whether customers came in the door. Inventory growth versus sales growth tells you whether markdowns are coming. Owned-brand and Roundel revenue growth tells you whether the margin engine is intact. Full-year EPS guidance, raised or cut, sets the next quarter's price range.
Implied moves on TGT earnings have run 8 to 15% in recent years, materially higher than Walmart or the staples cohort. The 2022 to 2023 inventory correction took out around 400 basis points of operating margin and roughly half the share price over 18 months. The 2024 dividend-raise announcement, the 53rd in a row, was largely priced in. Treat each earnings window as a separate risk regime and either flatten leveraged exposure or size for the gap.
Worked example: an earnings gap on a leveraged position
At a $140 share price, a 25-share TGT position is $3,500 of notional and requires $175 of margin at 1:20 leverage. A typical 10% earnings gap costs $350, which is twice your margin. A 15% gap costs $525, three times your margin. Round-trip commission is $6. Either size the position so the worst-case gap is survivable, or close before the print and re-enter into the reaction.
What moves the TGT share price
TGT is driven by a small set of recurring catalysts. Knowing which one is in play in any given week is more useful than watching the chart in isolation.
Quarterly comparable sales, traffic versus ticket
Target's discretionary mix means comp sales swing more than Walmart's. A negative traffic print is treated as a warning signal regardless of ticket size, because traffic is the harder number to recover. Comps have swung from negative mid-single digits in tough cycles to positive mid-single digits in better ones, and the move on print day usually reflects which side of zero the traffic line landed.
Inventory growth versus sales growth
After overshooting on inventory in 2022, Target lost around 400 basis points of operating margin to clearance markdowns. Markets now watch the inventory growth rate against sales growth at every print. When inventory growth runs materially above sales growth, margin compression two quarters out is the base case, and the multiple compresses on the print regardless of headline EPS.
Roundel and owned-brand revenue growth
Roundel ad revenue (past $1.5 billion) and owned brands (around $30 billion in sales) are the high-margin lines that drive operating-margin expansion when comp sales are soft. Quarterly disclosure on these growth rates moves the multiple more than the headline EPS beat. A Roundel growth deceleration is read as a negative signal even in an otherwise strong quarter.
Operating margin recovery toward 6 to 8%
Target lost roughly 400 basis points of operating margin during the 2022 to 2023 inventory correction and has guided to a multi-year recovery toward the 6 to 8% range. Each quarter's progress against that band moves the forward multiple. A 50 basis point miss on the operating-margin line will outweigh a top-line beat on the same day.
US discretionary consumer spend
Target sells more apparel, home, and toys than Walmart, so it tracks US credit-card delinquency rates, the University of Michigan consumer-sentiment print, and tax-refund timing. When discretionary spend tightens, TGT comp sales weaken before the overall retail print does, which is one reason TGT is a leading indicator for the consumer-cyclical cohort.
The Walmart print as a cross-read
Walmart reports one to two weeks before Target on the same fiscal calendar. The WMT comp number is the cleanest broad-consumer read available before the TGT print, and TGT typically trades in the direction of the WMT result for the days between the two releases. The relationship is not 1:1, since the merchandise mixes differ, but the cross-read is one of the most reliable setups in retail.
The 53-year dividend record
Target has raised its dividend every year for 53 consecutive years, putting it in the Dividend King group with Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, and Johnson & Johnson. The current quarterly dividend is around $1.12 per share. The annual June raise is closely watched as a confidence signal, and the streak itself supports the multiple during cyclical drawdowns by keeping income-focused holders in the name.
When TGT actually trades
TGT is a US single-stock CFD, so it tracks the New York Stock Exchange cash session. LHFX hours are 14:30 to 21:00 UTC, Monday to Friday, which is 09:30 to 16:00 New York time. The CFD is closed on NYSE holidays. Pre-market and after-hours liquidity is not offered on the CFD, so any earnings reaction that lands outside cash hours is captured at the following session's open.
Liquidity is not uniform across the session. The first 30 minutes after the cash open and the last 30 minutes before the close together carry the bulk of daily volume, and the midday lull is where stops can get run on thin tape.
Pre-market (US): 09:00 to 14:30 UTC
Not tradable on the TGT CFD at LHFX. This window is where earnings prints land and where Walmart's earnings release moves the implied direction for Target. Watch the futures and the WMT response, but you cannot transact TGT until the cash open.
Cash open: 14:30 to 15:30 UTC
The first hour after the New York open carries the widest range and the deepest order book of the day. Earnings reactions, dividend-raise announcements, and analyst upgrades or downgrades all clear into this window. Spreads are tightest from roughly 14:35 UTC onward once the opening auction settles.
Midday: 15:30 to 18:00 UTC
Range typically compresses. This is the cleanest window for trend-continuation entries on news-light days. Watch for headline risk around 16:00 UTC, when European volume tapers and US algo flow takes a bigger share of the tape.
Cash close and after-hours: 20:30 to 21:00 UTC and beyond
The last 30 minutes before the New York close concentrates rebalancing and index-fund flow. TGT can move 1 to 2% in this window on no specific news. After-hours from 21:00 UTC is closed on the LHFX CFD; positions held through the close are at the open price the following session.
Treat earnings-print days (late February, mid-May, mid-August, mid-November) as a separate session. The first 10 minutes after the cash open on earnings day routinely sees 5 to 10% range with wider spreads than any other window of the year.
TGT CFD versus owning the share versus the retail ETF
There are three practical ways to take a long view on Target. Each one has a different ownership profile, dividend treatment, leverage cap, and cost structure. The table below maps the trade-offs against the LHFX TGT CFD.
| Product | Ownership | Dividends | Leverage | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TGT CFD (LHFX) | Contract for difference, no share delivery, no voting rights | Cash adjustment on ex-date (credit on longs, debit on shorts) | Up to 1:20 | $3 per side commission plus raw spread, plus daily swap if held overnight |
| Direct TGT share | Full ownership, voting rights, shareholder communications | Cash dividend paid, currently around $1.12 per share quarterly | Cash account 1:1, regulated margin account up to 1:2 for retail | Broker commission plus full notional capital outlay |
| Consumer-discretionary ETF (e.g. XLY) | Fund unit holding, diversified exposure across the sector | Quarterly fund distribution, prorated across holdings | Up to 1:2 in a regulated margin account | Annual expense ratio (around 0.10% on XLY) plus broker commission |
Use a CFD when you want a defined-cost directional view on TGT specifically with the ability to short, and you do not need voting rights or a tax-voucher dividend. Use the underlying share when you want ownership, vote at the annual meeting in Minneapolis, and qualify for the cash dividend. Use the ETF when you want consumer-discretionary exposure without single-stock idiosyncratic risk.
Trading TGT at LHFX
LHFX runs TGT on MetaTrader 5 with STP/ECN execution on the underlying NYSE listing. You profit or lose on the TGT share-price move, can go long or short, and settle in USD. The specifications below apply to a standard LHFX live account.
Up to 1:20 on TGT CFDs. The cap is a ceiling, not a recommendation. Earnings gaps of 8 to 15% are common, which would cost 160 to 300% of margin on a fully leveraged position.
$3 per side, $6 round-trip, charged on top of a raw spread. There are no platform fees, deposit fees, or inactivity charges on a standard live account.
MetaTrader 5 desktop, mobile, and web, plus the LHFX Trade web platform. Charting, order types, and EAs are all supported. TGT appears in Market Watch under the ticker TGT.
STP/ECN execution on the underlying NYSE listing during US cash hours. No requotes on standard accounts. Slippage on the cash open and on earnings prints is real and visible in the platform.
14:30 to 21:00 UTC, Monday to Friday, mirroring the NYSE regular session. Closed on NYSE holidays. No pre-market or after-hours trading on the TGT CFD.
1 lot equals 1 share of TGT. Minimum trade size on LHFX is 0.01 lots, so positions can be sized in fractional shares. A 25-share position is entered as 0.25 lots.
Earnings are released before the US cash open in late February, mid-May, mid-August, and mid-November. The print is reflected in the open price of that session. Positions held into the print are subject to the full gap.
A worked sizing example
Account balance $2,000, willing to risk $40 on the trade. TGT trades at $140 with a $1.60 average true range stop distance and an 8 to 15% earnings gap risk. Risk-based size is $40 divided by $1.60 equals 25 shares. Notional is 25 multiplied by $140 equals $3,500. Margin at 1:20 leverage is $175, which is 8.75% of the account. Round-trip commission is $6. If the position is open through the earnings print, a 10% adverse gap costs $350, or 17.5% of the account, so close it before the print if you are not sized for the gap.
Open the live TGT instrument page for current spreads and overnight swap rates, or read the full spreads and fees and leverage pages for the all-account specification.
Risks specific to trading TGT
Beyond the general CFD warning, two TGT-specific risks deserve to be priced into every position. Both have produced double-digit single-day moves in the recent past, and a leveraged CFD will magnify them.
Inventory misjudgement risk
Target's discretionary tilt means a buying-error cycle (over-ordered apparel, home, or seasonal goods) leads to multi-quarter clearance markdowns and operating-margin compression. The 2022 to 2023 episode wiped out roughly 400 basis points of operating margin and the stock lost around half its value over 18 months. Read the inventory-growth line on every print.
Social-issue boycott risk
The Pride 2023 merchandise launch triggered an organised boycott that depressed traffic and comp sales for two consecutive quarters. Future culture-war flare-ups can produce similar regional or category-specific demand hits, and they tend to arrive without warning between earnings prints. The risk is asymmetric to the downside.
Earnings-day gap risk
Implied moves on TGT earnings have run 8 to 15%, materially higher than Walmart or large-cap staples. At 1:20 leverage, a 10% gap is 200% of margin loss in a single session. Either flatten leveraged exposure before late February, mid-May, mid-August, and mid-November prints, or size the position so the worst-case 15% gap is survivable on your account.
Leverage and overnight swap
1:20 leverage is a ceiling, not a target. A 5% adverse move on a fully leveraged TGT position wipes out the full margin. Multi-week directional CFD positions also accrue daily swap; for holds beyond two to three weeks, run the cumulative swap cost against the dividend pick-up and compare to direct equity ownership.
CFD risk warning. CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. Past performance is not indicative of future results.