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Why Target Tumbled 27% in the First Half of 2025

Key Points

  • The giant retailer's challenges have continued thus far in 2025.

  • It has contended with a boycott and weakness in discretionary spending.

  • To return to growth, the company has announced a multi-year acceleration program.

Target's (NYSE: TGT) troubles have continued thus far in 2025. The retail giant came into the year reeling from market share losses to Walmart, weakness in discretionary categories, and problems with theft -- and many of those challenges have only gotten worse.

Tariffs have put pressure on both consumer spending and its imports, and the company even faced a boycott earlier this year in response to its decision to end its DEI practices. As a result, its financial performance has continued to lag with falling sales and profits, and its guidance has also disappointed the market.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »

According to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence, the stock was down 27% through the first half of the year. You can see from the chart below that Target slumped through much of the first quarter due to the issues above. It then missed out on the market recovery that came later after the 90-day tariff pause was announced.

TGT Chart

TGT data by YCharts.

Target stock keeps falling

Target's woes this year seemed to begin around the time it said it would roll back DEI programs, including ending an initiative to carry more products from Black and minority-owned businesses. That move led to boycotts against the company that began in February, and seemed to be having at least a modest effect on the business. The company also acknowledged that its reputation has been damaged by the boycotts.

In its fourth-quarter earnings report, which came out in March, the company reported comparable sales growth of 1.5%. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) fell from $2.98 to $2.41, which still beat estimates at $2.25. Despite the beat, the stock still dropped on the update, as management warned about higher prices and its guidance called for flat top-line growth this year.

The stock then plunged after the "Liberation Day" tariffs were announced. After a modest recovery, the stock fell on its first-quarter earnings report, as comparable sales dropped 3.8% and adjusted EPS tumbled from $2.03 to $1.30. Target also cut its EPS guidance range for the year to $7.00-$9.00.

The exterior of a Target store.

Image source: Target.

What's next for Target

Target announced something of a turnaround plan in its first-quarter earnings report, saying that it was establishing a "multi-year acceleration office" and making several leadership changes to make faster decisions and return the company to long-term profitable growth.

Target still has turnaround potential, but it's clear why the stock has continued to lag.

Should you invest $1,000 in Target right now?

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The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Target wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

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*Stock Advisor returns as of July 7, 2025

Jeremy Bowman has positions in Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Target and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Is Amazon Stock the Best Prime Day Deal?

In this podcast, Motley Fool host Anand Chokkavelu and contributors Jason Hall and Matt Frankel discuss:

  • The Aug.1 tariffs.
  • This year's four-day Prime Day (and whether Amazon stock is a deal).
  • Elon Musk's political party and Tesla.
  • Bold predictions.

To catch full episodes of all The Motley Fool's free podcasts, check out our podcast center. When you're ready to invest, check out this top 10 list of stocks to buy.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

A full transcript is below.

Should you invest $1,000 in Amazon right now?

Before you buy stock in Amazon, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Amazon wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $694,758!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $998,376!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 1,058% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 180% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of July 7, 2025

This podcast was recorded on July 08, 2025.

Anand Chokkavelu: What are you buying today? Motley Fool Money starts now. I'm Anand Chokkavelu and I'm joined by two of my favorite Fools, Matt Frankel and Jason Hall. They we're talking Amazon's Prime Day. It's more like a prime week at this point, the latest on Tesla and Elon Musk, and we'll make some bold predictions. But first, let's update ourselves on tariffs. What's going on there, Matt?

Matt Frankel: Well, the tariff news seems to be changing so quickly. We're only recording this a few hours before it's being published, and I'm worried, if I'm being honest. The president announced a whole new round of tariffs yesterday, set to begin on August 1st for 14 countries, and that includes Japan and South Korea, which are our Number 4 in six trading partners, actually. Those both got 25% tariff rates. Some of the announced rates were as high as 40%. The president also said that the August 1st date is not set in stone. He said, "It's firm, but not 100% firm." I really think this is more noise than news at this point. Remember the initial Liberation Day tariff rates with the thing that looked like the cheesecake factory menu, [laughs] and then the pause that was announced until July 9th? This might be an effective negotiation tactic to get better trade deals. To be fair, it looks like it might be. But until anything actually goes into effect and is actually finalized and signed by both parties, it's noise. But in other tariff news, there is a good possibility that we're going to see a European Union trade deal soon. Each of the countries in the union are small trading partners, but collectively, they actually would make up our number one trading partner in terms of both imports and the trade deficit we have. It's definitely worth watching.

Jason Hall: From an investing perspective, maybe the Taco trade's real and still alive? I don't know. We've got another extension, another delay here, so there is a group that are going to say it's another chicken out moment. But I don't know if that's really investable for most of us. But thinking about the broad economic impact, I do think that for our trading partners, they're in a tough position. There's the tension between continuing to delay and avoid substantial tariffs because it seems like they keep getting kicked down the curb. But also, all of their industry and government spending, they still have to plan, too. All of the uncertainty weighs in there. But if you look at the markets, it seems like the markets are just shrugging this off is what's become business as usual. Maybe it's this fall before we really find out if litigation continues to play out, and eventually this ends up at the Supreme Court, it might have been a whole lot of work for the Supreme Court to say, hey, Congress, you guys need to do something. The president can't do this. We'll see.

Anand Chokkavelu: Jason, today's Amazon's Prime Day. We all know the deal. This is Amazon's once brilliant move to juice sales during the summer doldrums, maybe pull forward some of that back to school shopping, taking a little market share. It's grown to four days long now. It's doubled from last year. Any takeaways for investors? You know what? Is Amazon's stock priced as a Prime deal at this?

Jason Hall: You're not including the early days, the pre-Prime days deals that they do for people that can't hold off and wait for the four whole days. My wife may or may not have changed my Amazon password as an Amazon shopper. I'll tell you, there are some things that I'm looking at, for sure, but there's not much of an investing takeaway from that. It has become an event. It's become a retail event. But if we start looking at the business, the e-commerce business has really bounced back. There was some much needed restructuring a couple of years ago of expenses after the massive expansion during the pandemic. But that added scale, it's really, really paying off. It's e-commerce- revenue since 2019, so clean before the pandemic is up 77%. They've added $110 billion in e-commerce sales on a trailing 12 month basis.

Here's another interesting data point. Third party services revenue, that's also up by over $100 billion. Amazon's role as a giant in fulfillment has also exploded along with its own sales. But on AWS is still the big profit driver. Generates more than half of operating income, but only off of 17% of revenue over the past four quarters. Now, the stock, is it a Prime day deal? Maybe. Trades for less than 21 times operating cash flow. If you look back over the past decade, that's cheap. Here's the problem. They put about 85% of that operating cash flow right back into the business. But they need to right now, especially building up the tech infrastructure and R&D spending, but only time is going to tell if it can start converting those investments into free cash flow.

Matt Frankel: AWS is definitely the biggest profit driver for now. You also didn't mention the advertising that they're building out. That's one of the faster growing parts of their revenue, which is technically reported under the e-commerce platform. But it's a higher margin type of revenue than it gets elsewhere. Amazon certainly is not as cheap as it was just a few months ago, but it still looks very attractively valued, considering the recent progress with both efficiency and profitability of the business and all that growth you mentioned.

Anand Chokkavelu: Well, you got to raise the price right before you do the discount. [laughs] It's just a little stock trick. Speaking of those deals, any top prime deals for your household, Jason?

Jason Hall: I have to admit I'm eyeing a robot lawnmower. But I'm not convinced just yet, but since it's not Prime Day, it's Prime Week, like you said, I got a little time to think about it.

Matt Frankel: In the past few years, we've bought the kids the new Fire tablets because they're so cheap on Prime Day. I haven't looked yet, but I'm sure my wife has and has a plan. I like it when she does the shopping, because then when a bunch of packages show up and it's like Christmas.

Anand Chokkavelu: We've got a kid who never brushes his teeth and has destroyed his previous electric toothbrush, but we still waited a week to see if there are any deals. Spoiler alert, no deals on the specific toothbrush [laughs] we wanted. We also looked at Walmart and Target who do similar Remora to the Amazon Shark sales. But we'll see. I'm sure we'll be buying a bunch of stuff.

Jason Hall: Well, Anand, do you know what you call a kid that won't brush their teeth?

Anand Chokkavelu: What?

Jason Hall: A kid.

Anand Chokkavelu: [laughs] Exactly. But this is where he's beyond the normal distribution.

Matt Frankel: I was going to say you've won, too. [laughs]

Anand Chokkavelu: Right. At least versus his brother and all of his cousins. Let's move on to the boy who may have cried wolf on focusing less on politics and more on Tesla. What's up with Elon Musk today, Matt?

Matt Frankel: Oh, I assume you're talking about the new political party that he's starting the American Party, because there's a lot that's up with Elon Musk. Between Tesla, between SpaceX, between xAI, between all the other things, there's a lot that's up with Elon Musk. He wanted to add one more thing to his plate by creating his own [laughs] political party. To be fair, he ran a poll on X, formerly Twitter, asking who would want a third party. Overwhelmingly from millions of votes and not just like his own followers, through millions of votes 80% or so said yes. One of the party's stated goals is to get Republicans out of office who voted for Trump's bill. We all saw the big public fallout between him and the president. That's really what led to this. He describes the party as a tech centric, budget conscious, pro energy, and centrist party with the goal of drawing both disaffected Democrats and Republicans. Now, this is easier said than done.

This is not the first attempt to create a third party. There are actually like four or five of them already in existence that don't have any traction. It's very difficult to gain any traction as a third party. You would essentially have to set up a political party in all 50 states because all the local rules and things like that, it's all different. You need a lot of money, which fortunately he has. How much he wants to spend on this is another issue. But he has the resources to do it if he wants to.

Jason Hall: I think the investing take, if we circle back around to Tesla and is honored as you joked there at the beginning, the boy who cried wolf, clearly, Tesla shareholders, as much as from a political perspective, I'm sure there's a lot of people, no matter your political affiliation, that are so frustrated with the environment that support the idea of this. Tesla needs to figure out how to start selling more Teslas. They need the resources from selling more Teslas to pay for so many things. The company is at a major inflection point right now. Dan Ives talked about this with where they stand with trying to start bringing robotics to commercial use in the next few years. We've seen what's going on in Austin with autonomous driving. That's such a massive future part of the business. You got to start selling more Teslas and generate the cash flow to fund these things. There's even more headwinds now with some things in the spending bill that was passed that are going to gut a pretty important part of Tesla's profitability with emissions credits. There's a lot of reasons for investors to certainly be concerned about this wherever you stand as an engaged citizen.

Anand Chokkavelu: Elon Musk is famous for his bold predictions. After this break, we'll have some of our own.

Time for a segment we call bold predictions. Jason, start us off. What's your bold prediction?

Jason Hall: I'm going to stick with the theme from the show today, Anand, and talk about Tesla. I think Tesla's stock in the near term, it's probably going to rebound. But those robotics ambitions, the autonomous driving ambitions, I think they might be about as successful as the Solar Roof has been so far, and that's to say not very. At least not within the next five years' time. Now, a couple of reasons why. Number 1, I think we've seen some very ambitious, you talked about Musk's predictions about things. They've accomplished a lot of great things, but always years and years later. I think that's going to continue to play out.

But I think the concern that I have, and this is really at the heart of the prediction is that while the stock might rebound in the near term, I think the next few years are going to be really, really tough for Tesla and probably tough for Tesla shareholders because there's so much of those future prospects that are baked into today's price. I think as the realization comes out that those things are going to take longer and longer to monetize, and they might be harder to monetize if Tesla can't start selling more Teslas instead of less Teslas, then shareholders may be really in for a tough time in the next five years or so.

Matt Frankel: I'll make a very bold prediction, and I'm going to say that the Fed is going to surprise the market and cut rates this month when they meet at the end of July. The market's only pricing in about a 10% chance of that happening right now. But based on what the Fed governors have said, other than Jerome Pell, it's more likely than that to happen. I think there's a lot of economic data between now and then, a lot of trade deals that can be settled between now and then to calm the Fed's nerves. I think it's going to happen earlier than people think.

Jason Hall: That would be positive for Tesla.

Matt Frankel: True.

Anand Chokkavelu: Here at The Motley Fool, we live on feedback and Amazon gift cards. Be part of that feedback or to ask a question. Email us at podcast at fool.com. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. Don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial standards. It is not approved by advertisers. Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. To see our full advertising disclosure, please check out our show notes.

Anand Chokkavelu: Jason Hall, Matt Frankel, the entire Motley Fool Money team, I'm Anand Chokkavelu. My bold prediction is that we'll see you tomorrow.

John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Anand Chokkavelu, CFA has positions in Amazon and Target. Jason Hall has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Matt Frankel has positions in Amazon. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Target, Tesla, and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

My 2 Favorite Stocks to Buy Right Now

Key Points

  • Target is struggling and has become oversold.

  • Sea Limited is making a comeback amid growth in all three of its business segments.

A market at all-time highs is mixed news for investors wanting to put more money to work. Although the momentum points to a positive direction, the bargains in the stock market tend to be more challenging to find.

Fortunately for investors, some stocks buck overall trends and can be buys even with record stock prices. Knowing this, investors may want to give additional consideration to the following stocks, and possibly add positions if they prove to be a fit for their portfolio.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »

Favorite, happy, pointing.

Image source: Getty Images.

Target

Investors have turned on Target (NYSE: TGT) in recent years for a variety of reasons. High inventories, a sluggish economy, and controversial political stances contributed to declining foot traffic and lower sales in its nearly 2,000 stores across the U.S.

Those challenges also come at a time when rivals such as Walmart and Costco have managed to grow sales levels. Consequently, those stocks have risen as Target stock has fallen, and today the retailing giant is down by more than 60% from its all-time high.

However, the market has seen increasing indications that the stock has become oversold. Despite its troubles, Target stock is up by around 20% from its April low. Also, even with this increase, Target trades at a P/E ratio of around 11, comparing favorably to Walmart at 42 times earnings and Costco at a 56 P/E ratio.

The lower stock price and valuation have also had a positive effect on Target's dividend yield. As a result, its payout now returns 4.3%, far above the S&P 500 average of 1.2%.

Target also increased the dividend for the 54th straight year in June, making the company a Dividend King. That streak means it is less likely Target will stop the yearly payout hikes, as abandoning such a streak would probably further diminish confidence in the company at a time when it has struggled.

Also, CEO Brian Cornell has held that role since 2014. With the stock down over the last three years and his contract coming due around the September time frame, Target may experience a change in leadership in the near future.

Target's difficulties are likely not over, and a change in CEO could add to the uncertainty. But with the company still in a position to recover and the valuation at rock-bottom levels, its stock may be too appealing not to buy at current prices.

Sea Limited

Sea Limited (NYSE: SE) stock is available to U.S. investors through American depositary receipts. Still, the Singapore-based tech conglomerate is likely not a familiar name outside of Southeast Asia and Latin America.

The company is made up of three segments. Garena is a major force in the gaming world, particularly with its mobile game Free Fire again becoming one of the world's largest mobile games as measured by daily active users. Its other segments, e-retailer Shopee and its fintech enterprise Monee, lead both of those industries in seven Southeast Asian countries.

Sea Limited is also strong in Brazil despite competition from MercadoLibre, the e-commerce and fintech leader in Latin America.

Sea Limited stock dropped from lofty highs in 2021 when it made the ill-advised decisions to introduce Shopee to Europe and Latin America, places where it held no obvious competitive advantage. At the same time, Free Fire lost its No. 1 position and fell victim to a ban in the world's most populous country, India.

However, Shopee has scaled back in markets outside Southeast Asia and now follows the lead of MercadoLibre and Amazon, bolstering its logistics network in its home markets. Moreover, aside from Free Fire, it again operates esports in India, serving as a bullish sign for its stock.

Sea Limited stock is in recovery mode. Despite still trading at a 60% discount from its all-time high, the stock has more than quadrupled in value since its 2023 low.

Those gains have taken Sea Limited's P/E ratio to 105. Nonetheless, the recovery-driven profit growth places the forward P/E ratio at 38, a potentially attractive level for a fast-growing tech conglomerate. With all three segments back in growth mode, the stock is likely to continue moving higher as it seeks to return to all-time highs.

Should you invest $1,000 in Target right now?

Before you buy stock in Target, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Target wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $699,558!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $976,677!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 1,060% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 180% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 30, 2025

John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Will Healy has positions in MercadoLibre, Sea Limited, and Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Costco Wholesale, MercadoLibre, Sea Limited, Target, and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Down 30% This Year, Is Target Stock a Bargain Buy or a Value Trap?

Big-box retailer Target (NYSE: TGT) has been one of the S&P 500's worst-performing stocks this year. Poor growth numbers and concerns about the overall economy have been weighing on its valuation of late. The stock is trading at levels it hasn't been at in multiple years.

While Target's stock does look cheap, investors may be worried that it's not necessarily a bargain but instead a value trap and that the stock may be destined to fall even lower. Is that the case with Target, or could the market be overreacting to its recent struggles? Is it a stock worth adding to your portfolio today?

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

Person looking at an item in a store.

Image source: Getty Images.

Target has been struggling to grow

The big problem with Target is that its business has been sluggish, and that's been going on for a while. The company experienced a boom amid the pandemic, but it has been difficult for it to simply generate positive growth in recent quarters.

TGT Operating Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) Chart

TGT Operating Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) data by YCharts

Target relies heavily on discretionary spending, which makes it vulnerable to slowing economic conditions. And what's most concerning is that the worst may still be to come -- a full-blown recession.

For now, the economy is still doing relatively well, but if there's more of a slowdown and consumers further tighten up spending, then Target's top line may go on a much deeper nosedive in future quarters. The company is looking at raising prices due to tariffs, which may only exacerbate its current situation.

Target is trading at a steep discount

This year, shares of Target have declined by around 30% (as of June 20). It's been a brutal start that has pulled the stock down to levels it hasn't been at since early 2020. And the decline is also evident through the stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple, which is well below its five-year average.

TGT PE Ratio Chart

TGT PE Ratio data by YCharts

This steep discount highlights just how worried investors appear to be about the business. If the P/E is very low, that signifies that investors aren't confident about its future growth and are likely pricing in more challenging times ahead.

On the flip side, however, such a low valuation gives investors a bit of a margin of safety and buffer. If the company doesn't perform well, by investing in it at a discount, you may not be all that vulnerable to a steep drop in price. In the best-case scenario, where the business performs better than expected, the stock could be in a prime position to take off.

Why I don't think Target is a value trap

Many retailers are struggling amid the current economic conditions and the threat that tariffs pose to their businesses, not only Target. The company isn't doing well right now, but I think it would be premature to say its business is broken and that the stock is a value trap. It wasn't all that long ago that it was growing at a fast pace and commanding a much higher valuation. Unfortunately, concerns about the economy are impacting the business, and that can't be ignored.

If the company were doing badly and the economy was in good shape, then I'd be inclined to say that is indeed a value trap. But Target isn't at that stage right now. It could still endure some tough quarters ahead, but if you're willing to hold onto the stock for multiple years and be patient with it, this is a stock that could prove to be a bargain buy in the long run.

Should you invest $1,000 in Target right now?

Before you buy stock in Target, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Target wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $676,023!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $883,692!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 793% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 173% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 23, 2025

David Jagielski has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Target. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

My 5 Favorite Dirt Cheap Stocks to Buy Right Now

Though indexes have rebounded, the first half of the year has been rocky for investors. The market had to digest a variety of uncertainties, from geopolitical problems to mixed economic data and the U.S. plan to tax imports. All of these factors -- particularly the import tariff announcements -- have weighed on investors' appetite for stocks.

But in recent weeks, trade talk progress has lifted investor optimism, and this, along with strong corporate earnings reports, has helped the S&P 500 return to positive territory for the year. Many great bargains still exist though, making now a fantastic time to invest. Here are my five dirt cheap favorites to buy before the second half, which starts next Tuesday.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

A couple smiles as they sip coffee and look at the  screen of a laptop while in their living room.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Alphabet

Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) is the cheapest of the "Magnificent Seven" technology stocks that led market gains last year but tumbled this year amid concerns about tariffs and their impact on the economy. Today, the stock trades for 17 times forward earnings estimates, a steal considering the company's earnings track record, strong moat, and prospects across its main businesses.

This tech giant is the owner of something many people use every day: Google Search. It's the world's No. 1 search engine, and its presence in our daily routine and Alphabet's moves to use artificial intelligence (AI) to continually improve results should help it remain on top. This is key because Alphabet generates most of its revenue through advertisements across the Google platform.

Alphabet's Google Cloud also is proving to be a huge part of the revenue picture, generating double-digit quarterly growth in recent times. Again, AI is part of the story as Alphabet makes available a wide range of AI tools for customers. With AI growing in leaps and bounds and Alphabet's price low, now is the perfect time to invest.

2. Viking Therapeutics

Viking Therapeutics (NASDAQ: VKTX) doesn't yet have products on the market so we can't use traditional valuation metrics to assess the stock price. Instead, it's important to look at pipeline progress, the potential market for its products, and Viking's financial health.

This biotech is working on a variety of candidates for metabolic conditions but the one that's captured investors' attention is VK2735 for weight loss. An injectable candidate is set to start phase 3 trials, and the oral formulation has already started phase 2 trials. Earlier trials have produced strong results, and demand for weight loss drugs is booming -- the market is set to approach $100 billion by the end of the decade.

Though pharma giants Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk already share the market, demand suggests there's room for additional companies to generate significant growth too. Viking is well positioned to be one of them thanks to its candidates and cash position of more than $800 million to support development. That's why it looks like a bargain today.

3. Target

Target's (NYSE: TGT) revenue growth has stumbled in recent years as shoppers favored essentials over discretionary spending, but this retailer is well positioned to excel over the long term for a few reasons.

Target has built up a strong online presence, and that's helping digital sales advance even if overall sales have stagnated. The company also has invested in its stores through remodels and new openings, and revamped stores generally have delivered higher sales. Target also is known for its owned brands, many of which generate billions of dollars in revenue annually, for example, the Cat & Jack children's clothing line. Owned brands are an important asset for Target as the company has more control over the cost structure and therefore is able to generate higher profits on sales.

On top of this, Target is making moves to focus on growth. In the recent quarter, it announced the creation of an "accleration office" to supercharge decision making and the development of its strategy.

Target stock is cheap, trading at 13 times forward earnings estimates, and could easily head higher with any progress in the coming quarters.

4. Pfizer

Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) is another company that's had a growth problem recently. This is as its top-selling products -- its blockbuster coronavirus vaccine and treatment -- saw declining demand and at the same time, some of Pfizer's older blockbusters headed for patent expiration.

But it's important to take a long-term view and imagine where Pfizer may be a few years from now. The company has brought several new products to market over the past couple of years, and it acquired oncology specialist Seagen as part of an effort to grow its presence in oncology. Importantly, Pfizer says its oncology products are generating high gross margin and operating margin.

Meanwhile, Pfizer also has been working to cut costs, a move to strengthen its business and prepare for a new wave of growth led by its newer products. In the recent quarter, Pfizer said it was on track to deliver $4.5 billion in cost savings by the end of this year. And it expects $500 million of research and development cost savings by next year, and will reinvest this to support pipeline growth.

All of this suggests Pfizer's growth could pick up at any moment, making the stock a bargain trading at about 8 times forward earnings estimates.

5. Carnival

Carnival (NYSE: CCL) (NYSE: CUK) suffered in the early days of the pandemic as it was forced to temporarily halt cruises, but over the past couple of years, the company has been recovering and returning to growth.

The world's biggest cruise operator has done this by focusing on efficiency -- for example, replacing fuel-intensive ships with ones that use less -- and the company also has prioritized paying down debt. It's made significant progress on that, as the chart below shows, and tackled variable-rate debt, a move that makes it less vulnerable to shifts in interest rates.

CCL Total Long Term Debt (Annual) Chart

CCL Total Long Term Debt (Annual) data by YCharts

As for revenue and demand for sailings, they've been on the rise and have reached records in recent quarters. And advanced bookings, even at higher price points, have climbed, too. This is thanks to Carnival's strength in the market as well as the general popularity of cruise vacations.

So, right now, trading at 12 times forward earnings estimates, down from nearly 20 times, Carnival looks like a bargain to get in on before the second half as it continues along its new growth path.

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Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Adria Cimino has positions in Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Pfizer, and Target. The Motley Fool recommends Carnival Corp., Novo Nordisk, and Viking Therapeutics. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

It's a Dividend King That's Been Crushed. Don't Overthink It. Just Buy.

Kings don't always receive royal treatment. Dividend Kings certainly don't. Target (NYSE: TGT) provides a great example.

Shares of the giant retailer have plunged close to 40% below the high set in October 2024. Some investors have run for the hills. However, there's a case to be made for not overthinking the difficulties that Target faces and just buying the beaten-down stock.

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An off-target Target

Target hasn't hit the bullseye very much lately. The company's first-quarter sales slipped nearly 3% year over. Its earnings were well below expectations. Executives said during the Q1 earnings call that they weren't satisfied with the performance four times. Even worse, Target slashed its full-year earnings guidance and expects sales to decline by a low single-digit percentage.

What's going on? Some of the problems are largely outside of Target's control. For example, inflation has put pressure on discretionary spending. Consumer confidence declined for five consecutive months this year.

President Trump's tariffs create more issues for the entire retail sector. Target is no exception. Many of the products the company sells are imported. While Target has significantly decreased its reliance on products made in China, the level is still around 30%.

Target is responsible for one major headache, though. Management announced earlier this year a rollback of several diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives and a new "Belonging at the Bullseye" strategy for "creating a sense of belonging for our team, guests and communities." This decision sparked a major backlash, including a consumer boycott. Target CEO Brian Cornell briefly acknowledged the pushback in the Q1 earnings call, saying that one of the headwinds the company faces was "the reaction to the updates we shared on belonging in January."

Better news for the beaten-down retailer

However, there is some better news for the beaten-down retailer. For one thing, management isn't trying to sweep the company's problems under the rug. Target established an "acceleration office" led by COO Michael Fiddelke. The purpose of this group will be to facilitate faster decision-making and execution of strategic initiatives to return to growth.

Much of what made Target one of the most successful retailers in the world for years remains in place. Many of the brands offered in its stores remain popular with customers. Target's partnership with Kate Spade was a big hit.

A Target store.

Image source: Target.

The company continues to make solid progress on reducing inventory shrinkage and improving productivity. These efforts should help offset some of the pressures on profits.

Target appears to have a good strategy for dealing with tariffs. It's negotiating with vendors, trying to source from different countries with lower tariff rates where possible, adjusting order pricing, and (as a last resort) increasing prices. Chief commercial officer Rick Gomez thinks that these efforts should "offset the vast majority of the incremental tariff exposure" the company will face.

Then there's the dividend. Target recently announced its 54th consecutive year of dividend increases. Its forward dividend yield stands at 4.67%. Despite the retailer's challenges, it remains in a strong position to continue its impressive streak of dividend hikes with a low payout ratio of 49%.

Don't overthink, just buy

It's easy to overthink Target's problems and overlook its strong points. After all, this is a company that's on track to generate revenue of close to $105 billion this year and deliver solid profits. Target is also, as we've seen, a highly reliable source of dividend income.

We shouldn't leave out the stock's valuation, either. Target's shares trade at only 12.8 times forward earnings.

I expect it will take a while for Target's turnaround to play out. However, I suspect that investors who buy now will enjoy attractive total returns over the long term.

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Keith Speights has positions in Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Target. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

This Dividend King's Hike Is Bigger Than You Think

Target (NYSE: TGT) made it official on Thursday. The mass-market retailer lived to keep its Dividend King crown another year. Target boosted its quarterly dividend rate, something that the chain operator has now done for 54 consecutive years.

It wasn't much of an increase. The new quarterly distribution rate of $1.14 a share is just a pair of pennies -- or 1.8% -- higher than the old dividend. Target stock has moved exactly 2% higher just through the first four trading days of this week, so its forward yield of 4.6% is just a smidgeon lower than it was when the week started.

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This is still a pretty big move for Target. Let's zoom in on the retailer's storefront logo to see if it hit the bull's-eye this week.

My two cents

The timing of the payout boost isn't a surprise. As I pointed out earlier this week, Target has announced its annual increase between June 9 and June 15 over the last several years. If it was going to go through with another hike it was going to happen this week.

The new rate also isn't a surprise. Target also moved its quarterly dividend two pennies higher last June. Target has the earnings wiggle room to go higher, but it's the wrong message to send when the "cheap chic" chain has some issues to figure out. Thursday's move was about checking a box, keeping income investors satisfied until it drums up a way to win back the growth investors that have meandered elsewhere.

Target's net sales have declined slightly in back-to-back fiscal years, and this year is off to another challenging start. Comps declined 3.8% in the fiscal first quarter that it posted last month, and it's even worse at the physical store level. Digital comps are 4.7%, fueled by the growing success of Drive Up orders and Target's Circle 360 premium loyalty platform. Inside the actual stores, comps are down 5.7%.

Thankfully the chain remains more than profitable to cover the more than $500 million it's shelling out every three months in shareholder distributions. Target's guidance calls for adjusted earnings per share to clock in between $7 and $9 this year. The new dividend will set Target back $4.56 a share, translating into a forward payout ratio of 51% to 65%.

It's a reasonable ratio, sustainable if it can start growing again. Thankfully analysts see a return to growth on both ends of Target's income statement by next year. It's comforting to know, but investors have been burned by other retailers failing to turn things around after suffering popularity hiccups.

Someone approaching a piggy bank with a hammer behind the back.

Image source: Getty Images.

Shopping for a turnaround

Target's 4.6% yield is notable. The stock shedding almost a third of its value has pushed up the dividend from roughly 3% a year ago. Short-term rates on the money market funds have gone the other way, and now Target is generating more income than many short-term fixed income options. This isn't necessarily a badge worth wearing.

There are only a couple of department store operators currently dedicating a larger cut of their market caps to quarterly disbursements. Macy's is yielding 6.1%. Kohl's is at 5.7%, and that was after slashing its dividend by 75% earlier this year. Dillard's makes the cut on a trailing basis only because of a one-time distribution of $25 a share it made late last year, but the forward rate is microscopic.

This isn't a club that Target may want to be a part of right now. Those shareholders are bracing for sharp declines in profitability this year, along with sliding sales through these next two fiscal years. Cutting fat checks while their boats are taking on water isn't a financially seaworthy approach.

Target isn't in the same boat, at least not yet. It still has time. If it coughs up the Dividend King crown next June because it has a better use for its earnings -- as in making sizable investments to turn shopper perception around -- it wouldn't be a bad thing. The income investors won't be happy, but if it's a bridge to winning back the growth investors, swapping income for capital gains is a smart trade.

Target chose complacency this time. If it can't plug the leak a year from now it could be time to chart a new course.

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TechTarget (TTGT) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Image source: The Motley Fool.

DATE

  • Thursday, June 12, 2025, at 12 a.m. EDT

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Gary Nugent
  • Chief Financial Officer — Daniel Noreck

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Reported Revenues: $285 million in revenue for 2024, driven by 12 months of Informa Tech digital businesses and one month of legacy TechTarget operations.
  • GAAP Net Loss: GAAP net loss was $117 million for 2024, primarily due to acquisition and integration costs, noncash impairments, and limited contribution from legacy TechTarget.
  • Adjusted EBITDA: $31 million in adjusted EBITDA, reflecting underlying earnings generated by the reported structure in 2024.
  • Combined Company Revenues (Pro Forma): $490 million for the full year, assuming the combination was in effect from January 1, 2024, matching previous guidance and indicating flat underlying business performance.
  • Combined Company Net Loss: $166 million net loss for the combined company in 2024, including nonrecurring combination-related operating costs.
  • Combined Company Adjusted EBITDA: $82 million in adjusted EBITDA for 2024, including allocated Informa Group central costs and transitional service expenses.
  • Cash, Cash Equivalents, and Short-Term Investments: $354 million at year-end, supporting ongoing operations.
  • Convertible Senior Notes Outstanding: $416 million of outstanding convertible senior notes at year-end 2024.
  • Year 1 Operating Cost Synergy Target: On track to surpass $5 million, and management maintains high confidence in achieving or exceeding the $45 million run-rate synergy target by year 3.
  • Revenue Outlook: The company forecasts flat revenue for 2025 and an increase in adjusted EBITDA for the year, supported by cost synergies and the absence of one-off integration costs.
  • Subscription Business Renewal Rates: Value-based renewal rates in intelligence and advisory remained flat year-on-year for the period referenced. Other Brand to Demand subscriptions were flat to slightly down in value year-on-year for the period referenced.
  • Sales Organization: Restructuring accelerated, with a unified go-to-market strategy emphasizing largest customer accounts.
  • Product Strategy: NetLine repositioned for higher-volume segment, and Intelligence & Advisory offerings consolidated into fewer, larger packages aligned by key industry segments.
  • Cross-Sell Progress: Tactical success with cross-sell and initial execution of larger combined proposals, contributing to increased average deal size.
  • AI Initiatives: Company applies AI to operational efficiency, product enhancements (such as integration into Priority Engine for sales use cases), and market education on AI technologies.
  • Net Debt Position Update: CFO Daniel Noreck stated, "fundamentally, the net debt position is the same" after repayment of convertible notes and use of revolving credit.

SUMMARY

TechTarget (NASDAQ:TTGT) management confirmed the combination with Informa Tech produced a strong cash position and clear integration progress, supported by leadership appointments and restructured reporting lines. The subdued demand environment persists, but the company reiterated its target of broadly flat revenue and an improved adjusted EBITDA outlook for 2025, underpinned by synergy execution and cessation of one-time combination costs. Major integration milestones were completed during the quarter, and cost discipline was demonstrated.

  • CEO Nugent said, We are tracking well ahead of our year 1 operating cost synergy target of $5 million and have a high degree of confidence in our ability to meet or exceed the $45 million overall run-rate synergies targeted by year 3 (non-GAAP).
  • The integration produced successful tactical and strategic cross-selling, with several larger proposals accepted by key customers and an upsizing of average deal value.
  • Subscription renewal rates in the intelligence and advisory segments remained stable year-on-year.
  • AI's market impact spans three key areas: direct vertical opportunity, operational productivity, and product enhancement, but no material shift in serious buyer research behavior was reported.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Adjusted EBITDA: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, adjusted for nonrecurring and non-cash items, used for operating performance assessment.
  • Run-rate synergies: Expected recurring annualized savings or incremental value created by the combination or integration of two companies, once integration is fully realized.
  • NetLine: A demand generation product positioned for high-volume B2B lead delivery within the combined company's product suite.
  • Priority Engine: A proprietary platform incorporating AI to improve sales targeting and customer engagement for enterprise technology decisions.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Gary Nugent, our Chief Executive Officer; and Dan Noreck, our Chief Financial Officer. Before turning the call over to Gary, we would like to remind everyone on the call of our earnings release process. As previously announced, in order to provide you with an update on our business in advance of the call, we have posted a press release to the Investor Relations section of our website and furnished it on an 8-K. You can also find these materials with the SEC free of charge at the SEC's website, www.sec.gov. The corresponding webcast as well as a replay of this conference call will be made available on the Investor Relations section of our website.

Following Gary's remarks, the management team will be available to answer questions. Any statements made today by Informa TechTarget that are not factual, including during the Q&A, may be considered forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties, are based on assumptions and are not guarantees of our future performance. Actual results may differ materially from our forecast and from these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties, including those discussed in the Risk Factors section of our most recent periodic report filed on Form 10-K.

These statements speak only as of the date of this call, and Informa TechTarget undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements in order to reflect events that may arise after this conference call, except as required by law. Finally, we may also refer to certain financial measures not prepared in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of certain of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures, to the extent available without unreasonable effort, accompanies our press release. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Gary.

Gary Nugent: Thank you, Charlie. Good morning from Boston, Massachusetts, and thank you for investing the time to join us today and for your patience while we work through the Informa TechTarget 2024 audit and preparations for the 10-K filing. We filed our full set of 2024 financial statements and the annual report on Form 10-K last week on May 28, which is available at www.informatechtarget.com. Reported results for 2024 reflect the structure of the combination, comprising 12 months' contribution from the Informa Tech digital businesses and around 1-month contribution from the legacy TechTarget business, being the period from completion of the transaction on December 2, 2024, through to the year-end.

On this basis, reported revenues were $285 million with a GAAP net loss of $117 million, the latter reflecting the contribution period of TechTarget, acquisition and integration costs, and noncash impairments at the point of combination. Adjusted EBITDA was $31 million. On a combined company basis, assuming the combination was in effect from January 1, 2024, we delivered full-year revenues of $490 million, in line with the previous guidance. This equates to broadly flat underlying performance for the year, reflecting the subdued market backdrop, with activity levels impacted by geopolitical tensions and macroeconomic uncertainties. The combined company net loss was $166 million, and combined company adjusted EBITDA was $82 million.

The latter included certain nonrecurring operating costs relating to the combination, including an allocation of the Informa Group's central costs to the Informa Tech digital businesses in 2024, a portion of which are included in the transitional service agreements entered into on the closing date. Our financial position at the year-end was strong with cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments of around $354 million and around $416 million of outstanding convertible senior notes. Given the subdued market backdrop, I would describe our performance in 2024 as robust, holding revenues while improving margins.

And if you let me turn to the future, our combined business sits at the intersection of 2 attractive and dynamic markets, technology and B2B marketing, representing a $20 billion addressable market. Through this combination, we are creating the scale, talent, and operating platform to nurture and build specialist audiences and deliver increasing value for clients. And I am excited and optimistic about the opportunity that we have ahead of us and how that can translate into value for our other stakeholders, too, including our shareholders and our 2,000-or-so colleagues at Informa TechTarget.

In 2025, the foundation year for Informa TechTarget, our focus is on combining our strengths across brands, product, go-to-market, and talent to position the business for long-term growth. The combination program to successfully integrate the legacy companies is well underway, with all executive and senior leadership appointments completed and reporting lines and responsibilities confirmed. The restructuring of our sales organization has been accelerated, including a unified go-to-market strategy that gives increased focus to our largest customer accounts through dedicated service teams. Product strategy work is advancing well, including a repositioning of the NetLine product to address the volume end of the demand market and reshaping the Intelligence & Advisory portfolio to better meet the needs of our evolving customer requirements.

We are tracking well ahead of year 1 operating cost synergy target of $5 million with a high degree of confidence in our ability to meet or beat the $45 million overall run rate synergies targeted by year 3. The business environment remains subdued, but our guidance remains in line with previous commentary with a target for broadly flat like-for-like revenues and an increase in adjusted EBITDA for the year, supported by the overdelivery of combination synergies and nonrecurrence of one-off combination costs that were included within the 2024 results.

Beyond the near-term market dynamics and the foundation year, we remain confident in the medium-term growth opportunities for Informa TechTarget, underpinned by innovation and growth in technology and the increasing demand for more efficient data-driven B2B digital services. A final note, we will update our investor presentation following today's call, which again, you will find on www.informatechtarget.com. Thank you. I will now pass the call back to our moderator, Sami, and open the call for any questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Joshua Reilly from Needham.

Joshua Reilly: All right. Maybe to start off with, we haven't had a call in a while, so I think it would be helpful to get an update on how AI is impacting your business, including the risks and opportunities. And maybe touch on the trends you're seeing with the average number of white papers and webinars that customers are reading and watching before making a B2B tech purchase today versus a year ago or more when there was less proliferation of gen AI tools.

Gary Nugent: Josh, thank you for the question. Let me maybe think about this or break this down into sort of 3 component parts. The first thing, of course, is that AI as a technology is a market, in and of itself, for our company, for our business. So in other words, we are in the position to inform and educate and connect the market, the buy side of the market, about AI technologies and how they can be applied to business. And of course, we're in the business then of also the AI companies, who are providing products and services and technologies, to then actually reach those audiences, reach those buyers and decision-makers.

So that is, in and of itself, a market for us and one that we're addressing with enthusiasm. You've then got the second thing, I think, which is how do we apply AI to our business, first and foremost, to improve upon our effectiveness and our efficiency. And again, we have a number of initiatives across the business to do so. We can see this in many areas of our business, in our research, in intelligence and advisory capabilities, in our editorial and audience development capabilities, and indeed, in our marketing and sales capabilities and our go-to-market. And we are applying that to our business to improve our efficiency and to improve our effectiveness and indeed, to improve quality.

We then have the matter of applying AI to actually improve the products and bring new products and services to market. And of course, in the latter half of last year, you will have heard TechTarget and Mike talk about the application of AI to the Priority Engine product to actually help the sales use cases, engage with their customers, as a good example of that. And then maybe finally, to your point about how AI is impacting the way in which the marketplace discovers content and consumes content and is informed and educated. I would say that obviously, there will be, I think -- I mean, the application of generative AI, in particular, is changing that landscape.

But certainly, what we are seeing is that when customers are -- or when buyers, to be precise, when buyers are in the market and are looking to make large capital decisions, significant investments in their business, they are needing deep research into the subject and are looking for content which comes from authoritative and unbiased and known sources. And so we're not really seeing any changes in the pattern of that, what I would call, serious buyer research.

Joshua Reilly: Got it. That's very helpful. Appreciate that. You mentioned in the release that the cost synergies are on plan or ahead of expectations in terms of timing. As you've now had some time to review the combined company, can you just comment on how you feel about the total $45 million in cost and revenue synergies, both in terms of timing? And then is that still a total number that you're comfortable with going forward?

Gary Nugent: I can confirm that I am comfortable with the total number, and it's certainly our intention to meet or exceed that over the period. And I think we will track certainly on the -- if you recall, the synergies of $45 million are broken down into both cost synergies and revenue synergies. In particular, we feel confident in our ability to accelerate the cost synergy side of that equation. On the revenue synergy side of that equation, we're confident that we will be on track.

Joshua Reilly: Got it. And then maybe I'll just throw one more out there. You talked about some short-term disruptions to the business in January and February. Maybe you can just discuss what happened there and how you remedied that pretty quickly within a quarter to be executing moving forward.

Gary Nugent: Largely, that's about us approaching -- implementing a combination plan, Josh. Obviously, when we bring 2 companies together, there's lots of work to be done on processes, on systems, on the operating model, and organization design. I talked earlier on about us accelerating our go-to-market strategy and the adjustments in the sales organization, et cetera, et cetera. There's obviously an element of disruption associated with that, but we felt that it was important that we get ahead of the curve and that we execute with peace and get ourselves into the position to anticipate the market opportunity.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jason Kreyer from Craig-Hallum.

Jason Kreyer: So, Gary, you talked about kind of a subdued market that you're seeing right now. So I'm wondering if you could just give more details on what that means, maybe more external. You talked about kind of the internal disruption, but more details on the macro would be great. And then just as a follow-up, your guidance kind of called for more of a decline in the near term with more momentum as we get into the back half of the year. Can you talk about what gives you the confidence in that and what you're hearing from customers that gets you to that conclusion?

Gary Nugent: Yes, of course, Jason, thank you for the question. I think I would use -- we use the term subdued market, and I think that is reflective of what we experienced in 2024 as well. So I suppose what we're really seeing is that we're seeing a continuation of the pattern in 2024, and that's why -- it's reflective of that. So neither I would say a significant improvement or, for that matter, a deterioration would be my description of that. In terms of what gives me confidence in improving in the back half of the year, it's largely around the investments that we're making.

So us pressing ahead with our combination, getting ourselves in a position to anticipate the market more effectively in the second half of the year through our new go-to-market model, through the product strategy and the product road map that we've created, and generally leveraging, if you like, the thesis that was the combination in the first place, which is that, in bringing these 2 companies together, we create a company that has breadth and scale. And in doing so, that breadth and scale will play out in the marketplace and win out in the marketplace, particularly with the larger customers in the market who have scale requirements, and then we have the ability to meet those scale requirements.

Jason Kreyer: Gary, can you call out any opportunities in the near term where you think, in the early stages of this integration, you can see more success with the cross-sell or areas where you're already seeing success of cross-sell?

Gary Nugent: I can tell say that at present, I would say I would describe that in 2 ways. We've certainly seen what I would describe as tactically success with the cross-sell as we've taken the customer relationships that we had from both sides of the combination and leveraging them to drive incremental revenues -- incremental sales and incremental revenues. And we've already seen some success of that throughout the first quarter. I think separate and distinct from that, though, is what I would describe as maybe more of the strategic cross-sell, which is actually our ability to put much larger proposals in front of our customers.

And therefore, we are seeing and we've had 1 or 2 really interesting examples of us putting larger-size proposals in front of our customers and our customers buying into that. And of course, our ability to increase our average deal size with our customer base over time is an important part of our strategy.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Eric Martinuzzi from Lake Street.

Eric Martinuzzi: About 1/3 of your business is subscription or at least that's the number I have from -- it might have been 2023. I'm not sure if that still applies for the 2024 numbers. But just wondering if you could comment on how renewals went over the past quarter or so in comparison to a year ago and whether kind of a net revenue retention or gross renewals. Just curious to know how the subscription business has gone.

Gary Nugent: Thank you. The largest element of our subscription business is in the intelligence and the advisory space. And I would say, if I sort of recall, really, year-on-year, the value-based renewal rates are holding flat, as I would say, year-on-year, was my observation. Similarly, then I think we have other subscriptions in the Brand to Demand portfolio. And I would say a little bit flat year-on-year to a little bit down from a value perspective in some areas. But generally speaking, I'm comfortable in the quality of the product and our ability to drive growth in those products over the long term of the year.

Eric Martinuzzi: Okay. And that also, I assume, is the better -- you're expecting better in the second half of '25 than in the first half?

Gary Nugent: I think I would expect so, yes. But I would say that in terms of growing the subscription businesses, holding the renewal rate is obviously a strong part of that strategy and improving them modestly. But really, I think the acquisition of new customers and growing the base within our existing customers, what I would describe as new upsell to the subscription or new subscription customers is a core part of the strategy.

Eric Martinuzzi: Okay. And then you talked about on the product side, repositioning NetLine to the volume end of the market. How has that process been going?

Gary Nugent: Certainly, we're very encouraged with the Q1 experience of taking that product to that end of the marketplace and the market acceptance.

Eric Martinuzzi: All right. And then what exactly do you mean by the reshaping of the Intelligence & Advisory portfolio to better meet evolving customer demand? Could you give an example?

Gary Nugent: This was largely about us taking the portfolio of services, in particular, the intelligence services within the Intelligence & Advisory portfolio, and maybe what you might describe as packaging them into a fewer number of larger packages and then also aligning those packages with the segments in the marketplace that we see, the segments being enterprise IT, consumer, industrial, and telecommunications and service providers. So it's really about product packaging and taking packages, which I think were more suited to the needs and the requirements of the marketplace.

In addition to that, then bringing the Enterprise Strategy Group business and joining that with the Omdia and the Wards and the Canalys business and Intelligence & Advisory, we've now created 2 consulting capabilities, one which is the strategy consulting capability and the other which is the go-to-market strategy consulting capability. And I think that creates a much cleaner offering in the marketplace to those corporate strategists, analyst relations, product business unit leaders, product managers, and product marketers.

Eric Martinuzzi: Got it. And then lastly, Dan, what can you tell us about the latest for the cash and debt balances, either a March 31 update of the -- or maybe even the end of May update on cash and debt?

Daniel Noreck: Sure, Eric. I mean, from a net debt position, we are fundamentally in the same place, right? Because we used the cash that was on hand, plus we drew down $135 million on the revolving line of credit to fund the repayment of the convertible notes. But fundamentally, the net debt position is the same.

Operator: We currently have no further questions. And with that, we would like to thank you all for joining us today. This concludes today's call. You may now disconnect your lines.

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Dollar General and Dollar Tree Are Both Dollar Stores, but They're Actually Very Different. Here's What That Means for Investors.

At first sight, the two discount store chains appear similar enough. Sure, Dollar Tree's (NASDAQ: DLTR) distinguishing feature is a retail price point of $1.25 for at least most of its merchandise. It and Dollar General (NYSE: DG) are still both categorized as dollar stores, however, and certainly compete with one another for consumers' dollars.

These two companies are actually quite different from one another, though, so much so that their stocks aren't likely to move in tandem for the long haul. Here's what investors need to know.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

The aisle of a store.

Image source: Getty Images.

Not the same

Dollar General is still the titan of the business, operating 20,594 total stores peppered across most of the United States. Some of those are more experimental stores called pOpshelf, but by and large these locales operate under the Dollar General banner. This company did $40.6 billion worth of business last year, selling goods at a typical range of price points you'd expect from a discounter.

Dollar Tree's structure is different. It's actually the combination of 8,881 Dollar Tree stores and 7,622 Family Dollar stores, although the entirety of the latter chain is soon going to be sold to a private equity outfit. While this sale will essentially cut Dollar Tree's physical footprint in half, the remainder may be better off with this severing. The pairing never achieved the synergies investors were hoping it would when it was first formed back in 2015. The two separate units ended up operating quite independently of one another, with the Family Dollar arm simply devolving into dead weight that couldn't quite compete with more than a little head-to-head rivalry like Dollar General, but also outfits like Ollie's and Big Lots.

Still, the Dollar Tree brand itself enjoys enough scale -- $17.6 billion in sales last fiscal year -- and enough presence so that its eventual smaller size won't prevent it from effectively competing with Dollar General.

Nevertheless, there are differences investors will want to keep in mind.

Comparing and contrasting Dollar General and Dollar Tree

Giving credit where it's due, consumer market research outfit Numerator dug up most of the data on the table below, while the two companies themselves supplied the rest. Take a look, noting that Numerator's numbers for Dollar Tree only apply to Dollar Tree, and do not reflect Family Dollar's presence in the marketplace. (Dollar Tree's sales mix data at the bottom of the table, however, comes from these two companies themselves, and does include Family Dollar's portion of Dollar Tree's total sales.)

Metric Dollar General Dollar Tree
Locations
Rural 42% 30%
Suburb 38% 38%
Urban 19% 32%
Demographics
Lower income (<$40K) 27% 26%
Middle income ($40K-$125K) 49% 48%
Higher Income (>$125K) 24% 26%
Penetration/Reach
Average annual spend $522 $290
Household penetration 60% 79%
Purchase frequency (annual) 20x 27x
Repeat rate 85% 80%
Sales mix
Consumables 82.7% 48.8%
Discretionary (seasonal, home, etc.) 17.3% 51.2%

Sales-mix data comes from each respective company. All other data provided by Numerator.

Much of this was already known, or at least broadly understood. Dollar General, for instance, has frequently touted the fact that roughly three-fourths of its stores are found in towns with populations of less than 20,000. According to Numerator, rural customers, despite shopping less often, contribute significantly due to higher spending per trip.

It's also arguable that Numerator's income breakdown understates just how many lower-income consumers depend on Dollar General. With above-average exposure to rural markets where incomes tend to be less than what they are in more urban settings, Dollar General's average customer lives in households with annual incomes believed to be right around the $40,000-per-year threshold Numerator is using at the low end of its middle range.

Perhaps the most eye-opening data point here, however, is how much consumables (food, cleaning supplies, etc.) Dollar General sells as opposed to Dollar Tree. More than 80% of Dollar General's sales are consumables, in fact, while a little less than half of Dollar Tree's are.

And remember, this sales-mix data includes Family Dollar's revenue, which presumably is more like Dollar General than not. Once Family Dollar's sales are taken out of the mix, look for Dollar Tree's sales mix to shift to an even greater proportion of discretionary goods.

Built to thrive in different environments

Great, but what does this mean for current and would-be investors of either stock?

It seems counterintuitive at first, but Dollar General's significant exposure to consumables is a problem when inflation lingers at relatively high levels, as it has since soared in 2021 and 2022. Not only does this pump up the retailer's costs on goods that already sport paper-thin margins, but in many cases struggling consumers simply stop making these purchases rather than shopping around for a cheaper alternative. As CEO Todd Vasos said last August following a disappointing Q2 report that preceded a cut to full-year guidance, "this lower-end consumer continues to be very much financially strapped, especially as it relates to her ability to feed her families and support her families." That message was reiterated in March this year.

The graphic below quantifies Vasos' qualitative assessment. Dollar General's same-store sales growth in 2022 is only the result of 2021's steep declines. This improvement withered in 2023, and has yet to be restored in earnest.

Dollar General's same-store sales have been subpar since 2021, crimped by inflation.

Data source: Dollar General Corp. Chart by author. (Note that the reason Dollar General's same-store sales soared in 2022 is only because the comparisons to 2021's poor numbers were so easy to improve.)

In contrast, Dollar Tree's discretionary business is arguably a competitive edge when inflation is chipping away at consumers' buying power.

This also initially seems counterintuitive. Think bigger-picture though. In a normal, decent economic environment, consumers might splurge modestly on décor, kitchenware, toys and the like with purchases at Walmart, Target, or Amazon. When forced to really pinch pennies though, these "splurges" increasingly happen at Dollar Tree at an affordable starting price point of $1.25.

In other words, Dollar Tree is the spending downgrade that Dollar General can't be.

The comparison below supports this argument. Not only have Dollar Tree's same-store sales consistently outgrown those of Dollar General since inflation was catapulted in 2021, Dollar Tree appears to have actually thrived when Dollar General couldn't specifically because of this lingering inflation.

Dollar Tree's same-store sales growth has consistently beaten Dollar General's since 2021, when inflation first soared.

Data source: Dollar General Corp. and Dollar Tree Inc. Chart by author. Note that Dollar Tree's same-store sales growth data does not include Family Dollar's same-store sales figures.

These two stocks aren't exactly interchangeable

The opposite situation will, of course, lead to the opposite outcome. That is to say, if and when inflation finally cools and rekindled economic strength takes hold -- improving household incomes even in rural areas -- that plays to Dollar General's strengths.

That wouldn't necessarily put Dollar Tree at a troubling disadvantage though, to be clear. Dollar Tree's greater exposure to more urban shoppers and at least slightly bigger household incomes keeps its business relatively steady. There will also always be at least some demand for an affordable "treasure hunt" that only Dollar Tree can offer.

Still, an improving economy would set the stage for a shift in the competitive dynamic between these two dollar store chains, which could ultimately make a difference in their underlying stocks' performances.

And that may be what the market's betting on happening sooner rather than later, in light of Dollar General stock's recent market-beating run-up.

In the meantime, Dollar Tree shares are underperforming at least partly due to its Family Dollar drama. Even if it will be shedding this problematic arm soon, it's disruptive. Some investors may also be sensing a brewing shift toward economic health despite fallout from newly imposed tariffs that Dollar Tree is far more vulnerable to than Dollar General.

If you don't think the U.S. economy is actually out of the woods yet though (particularly as it pertains to consumers' buying power), beaten-down Dollar Tree shares are still arguably your better bet. Dollar General's more modest exposure to higher tariff costs still isn't enough to offset its disadvantageous mix of shopper demographics and its heavy reliance on lower-margin consumables.

Should you invest $1,000 in Dollar Tree right now?

Before you buy stock in Dollar Tree, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Dollar Tree wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $614,911!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $714,958!*

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See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of May 5, 2025

John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. James Brumley has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Target, and Walmart. The Motley Fool recommends Ollie's Bargain Outlet. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

3 Magnificent S&P 500 Dividend Stocks Down 30% to Buy and Hold Forever

There are a few things that Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F), Target (NYSE: TGT), and Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), have in common. They are all components of the prestigious S&P 500. The stocks all pay a dividend north of 4%, with two of them yielding a lot better than 5%. Finally, bucking the trend of the rallying market, they are all trading at least 30% below their 52-week highs.

There are worse fates than being a household name, declaring generous quarterly distributions, and being currently out of favor. Let's take a closer look at these three iconic dividend-paying S&P 500 stocks that you can buy at a discount, potentially holding on for the long haul.

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1. Ford

It's been four years since I unloaded my second Ford Flex. The now-discontinued crossover SUV was the first ride I replaced with the same make and model. The shares have fallen out of favor, trading 31% below last summer's high. I guess you can say that investors also miss the Ford flex.

The legendary automaker is doing better than its stock chart, with Ford shedding more than a quarter of its value over the past three years. Revenue growth has been positive in the first four years coming out of the pandemic. The top line did go the other way in this week's quarterly update, but even then investors found blue skies in Blue Oval's fresh financials.

A family singing along in the car.

Image source: Getty Images.

Revenue declined 5% to $40.7 billion for the first three months of this year, but analysts were holding out for a 16% drop. Wall Street pros were modeling a profit of $0.02 a share, but Ford drove through that barrier wall to earn $0.14 a share for the first quarter. The bottom-line beats are accelerating, with Ford clocking in 3%, 20%, and now 557% ahead of market expectations in the last three quarters, respectively.

Ford did suspend its forward guidance given the trade war uncertainties, warning that it expects a full-year hit on its adjusted earnings before interest and taxes from tariffs to be around $2.5 billion. It's hoping to realize $1 billion in cost savings to partly offset that hit. Two days later it announced that it would be raising prices on three vehicles it makes in Mexico by as much as $2,000. However, there was some upbeat news later in the week when U.S. automakers became part of the framework of a potential trade deal with the United Kingdom.

The headlights are still bright for Ford and other automotive stocks despite the foggy windshield. The average age of passenger cars on the road is a record 14 years. The demand is there for a surge in auto sales. Consumers just need economic confidence and a climate of low financing rates to make the plunge. The stock's nearly 6% yield comes dangerously close to its projected free-cash-flow average in the next couple of years. If the economy softens or tariffs intensify the distributions won't be sustainable at the current level. However, don't underestimate the power of pent-up demand and the ability of the economy to course correct before hitting more potholes.

2. Target

The cheap chic discount retailer feels more cheap than chic these days. It's not resonating as the cool place for value-conscious shoppers, with sales declining in four of the past seven quarters. The top line has dipped slightly in back-to-back fiscal years. The stock also isn't resonating with investors, off a blistering 42% from its August peak.

The bullish news for investors is that the stock is well positioned for a possible economic brake tap. It offers non-discretionary grocery items, and has strong private-label sales elsewhere. Folks who shop at mainstream department stores may trade down to Target when money is tight. The 4.6% dividend -- near a historical high -- appears safe in the near term. The chain is trading for less than 11 times trailing and forward earnings, dropping to just 10 times next year's projected profit.

3. Pfizer

When a major pharmaceuticals company is packing a 7.6% yield it should be more of a red flag than an income party. It often means that many of its key products are coming off patent, rivals have better alternatives, or the pipeline is barely trickling for potential new treatments. There's a lot of that here. Analysts see revenue gradually sliding through at least the next five years with net income to follow suit after next year.

It doesn't have to go that way. Pfizer can strike gold with a new treatment, even though it did throw in the towel last month on a once promising oral weight loss drug candidate. Pfizer can also use its clout and leverage to acquire a smaller player with a brighter growth trajectory. Its streak of 16 consecutive years of hikes can be in jeopardy if its profits don't bounce back, but it's just the "P" in Pfizer that's silent. The drug giant itself still has a lot to say.

Should you invest $1,000 in Ford Motor Company right now?

Before you buy stock in Ford Motor Company, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Ford Motor Company wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $617,181!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $719,371!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 909% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 163% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of May 5, 2025

Rick Munarriz has positions in Pfizer and Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Pfizer and Target. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

2 Dividend Stocks to Double Up On Right Now

Equity markets have dropped this year as President Donald Trump's tariffs have raised fears that the U.S. economy will fall into a recession. U.S. gross domestic product did shrink in the first quarter, and the S&P 500, though it has recovered from its earlier declines this year, is still down by more than 4% so far in 2025 as of May 6, and down by more than 8% from its peak.

However, market pullbacks give investors who are focused on the long term opportunities to pause and investigate companies with strong long-term prospects. It's also comforting to buy dividend-paying stocks, as those regular payouts can help enhance your returns. That's particularly true during uncertain times.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

These two companies have increased their payouts annually for more than 50 consecutive years, making them Dividend Kings. Those impressive track records mean they've not only consistently made payouts but increased them even during challenging economic times.

Someone celebrating while looking at a stock chart.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. PepsiCo

PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) sells beverages and foods under well-known brands like Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Gatorade, Cheetos, and Quaker. Still, its sales haven't been immune from the difficult overall economic environment.

Its sales increased by a tepid 1% in the first quarter, after factoring out the impacts of acquisitions, divestitures, and shifting foreign currency exchange rates. That increase was entirely attributable to price increases, which added 3 percentage points to the top line, as lower sales volumes subtracted 2 percentage points.

While no one can predict when the current complex economic headwinds will abate, they undoubtedly will at some point. When consumers return to their normal spending habits, PepsiCo will undoubtedly be one of the beneficiaries. Meanwhile, its management team has done a good job at controlling costs -- adjusted earnings per share grew by 5% in Q1.

In a positive sign, a couple of months ago, the board of directors announced a 5% increase in the quarterly dividend that will be distributed in June. That will extend PepsiCo's streak of payout hikes to 53 straight years -- and with a 78% payout ratio, it can afford those payments.

At the new $5.69 annual rate and its current share price, PepsiCo's stock has a 4.3% dividend yield. That's more than three times the S&P 500's yield of 1.3%.

The stock has fallen by more than 25% over the last year versus a 9.6% gain for the S&P 500. However, for patient investors, this has created a better valuation that creates a buying opportunity. PepsiCo's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio stands at around 19 compared to 27 a year ago. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 has a P/E ratio of about 27.

2. Target

Target (NYSE: TGT) has grown into a popular shopping destination by offering differentiated merchandise. Many times, you might only find the items at Target.

Its sales have also been impacted by customers paying more for everyday essentials like food. In its fiscal fourth quarter, which ended on Feb. 1, same-store sales (comps) increased just 1.5%.

Positively, people still visited Target's stores and website. That's evidenced by the 2.1% increase in the number of transactions. They spent less on each visit, though, with the average transaction size down by 0.6%.

The company's gross margin contracted from 26.6% to 26.2% due in part to markdowns and higher supply chain costs. Looking ahead, higher tariffs create short-term uncertainty that may raise Target's costs and potentially hurt sales and margins. However, long-term investors should not get discouraged.

After all, the increased traffic shows that people haven't abandoned Target. They're just spending less. When their personal economic situation improves, it seems likely that they'll go back to spending more money at Target.

While waiting for the improvement, Target shareholders can enjoy its 4.6% dividend yield. When the board of directors raised dividends last June, it ran the company's streak of boosts to 53 consecutive years.

The streak doesn't seem like it will get broken anytime soon based on the company's free cash flow (FCF). Last year, the company generated $4.5 billion in FCF and paid out $2 billion in dividends.

The stock has tested investors' patience with a price drop of more than 40% over the last year. However, the share price looks compelling with its trailing P/E falling from 18 to below 11.

That suggests an opportunity to collect dividends and benefit from capital appreciation.

Should you invest $1,000 in PepsiCo right now?

Before you buy stock in PepsiCo, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and PepsiCo wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $623,103!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $717,471!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 909% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 162% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of May 5, 2025

Lawrence Rothman, CFA has positions in Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Target. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Best Stock to Buy Right Now: Walmart vs. Target

The stock market's sharp sell-off is testing investors' patience. The recent tariff implementations and pauses have created a lot of near-term uncertainty.

That's particularly true for global retailers like Walmart (NYSE: WMT) and Target (NYSE: TGT) that sell goods and source materials in different countries. However, with overall stocks down, you can use this as a buying opportunity -- if the long-term fundamentals remain sound.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

Which one of these two retail giants offers better investment potential for those planning to buy and hold for the long haul?

Two people shopping in a store.

Image source: Getty Images.

Walmart

Walmart operates namesake stores in the U.S. and internationally. It also runs Sam's Club, a membership club with warehouses in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. The Walmart U.S. business accounted for 69% of last year's $676.3 billion in sales.

The business was founded on keeping costs and prices ultra-low, and that remains true. Management continues to invest heavily in technology that combines its physical stores with e-commerce to offer convenience and fast delivery.

For instance, almost all U.S. Walmart stores have same-day pickup and delivery. Management also launched Walmart+, a subscription service that offers free shipping, discounts on gas, and a more efficient checkout process, a few years ago.

The low prices and convenience continue to draw customers. The Walmart U.S. segment saw same-store sales (comps) increase 4.6% in its fiscal 2025 fourth quarter. Higher traffic contributed 2.8 percentage points. with increased spending accounting for the balance. This period ended on Jan. 31.

The company remains highly profitable, putting it in a good position to increase investments to stay ahead of the competition. Fourth-quarter operating income, adjusted for certain non-operating expenses and excluding foreign currency fluctuations, grew 9.4% to $7.9 billion.

Walmart's share price hasn't been immune from the recent stock market sell-off. The stock has dropped 0.8% in 2025 (through April 9) versus 7.2% for the S&P 500 index, although that index fell more during the recent market downturn.

That valuation has remained constant since the start of the year. The stock has a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 37.

Target

Target sells a wide array of goods, including apparel, beauty, home furnishings, food/beverage, and household essentials. It aims to differentiate itself by offering merchandise under its own brands and those sold exclusively at its stores and website.

The company's sales have been hurt lately as consumers have focused on basic items in the wake of rising costs. Still, Target's fiscal fourth-quarter comps increased 1.5%, driven by higher traffic that contributed 2.1 percentage points. The amount customers spent dropped 0.6 percentage points. The period ended on Feb. 1

Target's gross margin contracted 0.4 percentage points to 26.2%. That's due in part to higher promotional activity and markdowns.

Although management has given a cautious outlook for the year, including flat comps, the higher traffic shows people still like to shop at Target. They're just spending less right now and are drawn to discounts. That's likely due to larger economic forces that will subside at some point.

Target's stock price has taken it on the chin. The share price has fallen nearly 28% this year. That's partly due to tariff implementations and the feared economic effect on Target's costs and prices that will impact short-term profitability.

The shares have become cheaper, however. The stock trades at a P/E of 11, down from 14 at the start of 2025.

Which retailer to choose?

I like both retailers. Walmart's ultra-low prices will always attract customers. It's particularly true during challenging economic times. That's why its share price has held up relatively well.

Target depends on differentiated merchandise, and its customers will likely trade down to lower-priced merchandise when tough times come. But over the long run, people will likely return to Target.

Based on Target's attractive valuation and favorable long-term outlook, I'd choose its stock over Walmart right now.

Should you invest $1,000 in Walmart right now?

Before you buy stock in Walmart, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Walmart wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $495,226!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $679,900!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 796% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 155% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of April 10, 2025

Lawrence Rothman, CFA has positions in Target. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Target and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

1 Magnificent S&P 500 Dividend Stock Down 49% to Buy and Hold Forever

The stock market was starting to look overpriced for a while, and then the Great Correction of 2025 came along.

On the morning of April 9, the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) market index has dropped 18.5% below February's all-time high. The popular index's average price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) fell back from a lofty 30.0 to a more reasonable 24.7. It's getting easier to find tempting buys in this cooler market.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

I'm particularly interested in big-box retailer Target (NYSE: TGT) right now. Let me explain why the Minnesotan store chain looks so good in April 2025.

Target's dramatic price drop opens a rare buying window

The innovative merchant's stock has plunged 49% over the last year, including a 38% retreat from an attempted recovery that fizzled out on January 27. Long-term investors have taken an even harder hit, harking back to a record price of $266 per share in November 2021 -- just before the inflation panic started.

I'll admit that it's not a perfect setup. Target's revenue growth slowed down dramatically in the era of spiking inflation, while arch rivals Walmart (NYSE: WMT) and Costco (NASDAQ: COST) barely noticed the weaker economy,

But Target was defending its sector-leading profit margins. Whether you're looking at operating margins, bottom-line net margins, or cash flow margins, Target still collects a few more pennies per revenue dollar than Costco or Walmart.

Target is making the most of its flattish revenues. Combining this money-making talent with Target's swooning stock price results in two incredible charts.

First, check out Target's skyrocketing earnings yield:

TGT Normalized Earnings Yield Chart

TGT Normalized Earnings Yield data by YCharts

This isn't the most widely discussed valuation metric in the world, so it might not ring a bell. The earnings yield is essentially the P/E ratio backwards -- divide a company's earnings by the share price. A higher number indicates a more profitable company and lower-priced stock.

And Target looks like a bargain-bin find from this perspective. The stock is more than just modestly priced; it's on fire sale.

Then there's this little tidbit. Target has no reason to stop its annual dividend boosts, and the company has increased its payouts in each of the last 54 years. Through thick and thin, the dividend bumps keep coming. And when you pair that shareholder-friendly tendency with the same negative stock price action as before, you get a very generous dividend yield:

TGT Dividend Yield Chart

TGT Dividend Yield data by YCharts

There's just no contest if you're looking for a strong income stock in the retail sector. Target is the no-brainer pick, leaving Walmart and Costco far behind.

Why Target's slow sales growth doesn't scare me

So I don't mind Target's slow sales growth, as long as the company keeps making sector-leading profits and passing them on to investors in the form of great dividends.

Moreover, Target isn't sitting on its cash-generating laurels. The company rolled out generative AI tools in 2024, aiming to support store workers and assist shoppers in one fell app. As recently as last month, management unveiled a multi-faceted plan to boost annual revenue by $15 billion over the next five years. This effort relies on the AI assistant, a more selective inventory management system, and more shop-in-shop experiences.

I've been watching Target's turnaround plan from the sidelines for way too long. Don't mind if I pick up a few shares at these rock-bottom prices, locking in a fantastic dividend yield at the same time. With five decades of uninterrupted dividend increases under its belt, I can imagine Target delivering solid income for the foreseeable future.

Should you invest $1,000 in Target right now?

Before you buy stock in Target, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Target wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $509,884!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $700,739!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 820% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 158% for the S&P 500. Don’t miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of April 10, 2025

Anders Bylund has positions in Walmart. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Costco Wholesale, Target, and Walmart. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Tesla Underdelivers

In this podcast recorded April 2 before President Donald Trump's big tariff announcement, Motley Fool analyst David Meier and host Mary Long discuss:

  • How different companies were bracing for the tariff impact.
  • Tesla's sales slump.

Motley Fool contributor Jason Hall joins host Ricky Mulvey for a look at Texas Instruments and Taiwan Semiconductor.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

To catch full episodes of all The Motley Fool's free podcasts, check out our podcast center. When you're ready to invest, check out this top 10 list of stocks to buy.

A full transcript is below.

Don’t miss this second chance at a potentially lucrative opportunity

Ever feel like you missed the boat in buying the most successful stocks? Then you’ll want to hear this.

On rare occasions, our expert team of analysts issues a “Double Down” stock recommendation for companies that they think are about to pop. If you’re worried you’ve already missed your chance to invest, now is the best time to buy before it’s too late. And the numbers speak for themselves:

  • Nvidia: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2009, you’d have $249,730!*
  • Apple: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2008, you’d have $32,689!*
  • Netflix: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2004, you’d have $469,399!*

Right now, we’re issuing “Double Down” alerts for three incredible companies, and there may not be another chance like this anytime soon.

Continue »

*Stock Advisor returns as of April 5, 2025

This video was recorded on April 02, 2025

Mary Long: Welcome to Liberation Day. You're Listening to Motley Fool Money.

I'm Mary Long. Join on this Wednesday morning, the Liberation Day of all Liberation Days by Mr. David Meier. David, great to see. Happy to have. How you doing?

David Meier: I'm doing well. It's great to see you, too.

Mary Long: Today is April 2, the day after April Fool's Day. As I've mentioned a few times already in this show, it's also Liberation Day. What the heck does that even mean? It's a great question. It's a fair question. We don't actually fully know.

David Meier: No, we don't.

Mary Long: But we are set, allegedly, to find out later today at 4:00 PM Eastern Time when President Donald Trump is scheduled to make an announcement from the White House Rose Garden. This event is being dubbed Make America Wealthy Again. We're recording this at 11:30 AM Eastern. The show won't come out until right during right after the Make America Wealthy Again event. We're not going to talk too much or make too many predictions about what exactly is going to unfold during that event. David, I will ask you to kick us off. Anything you're keeping an ear out for that you're especially going to be paying attention to or any bets you're making on what exactly might unfold?

David Meier: We literally have no idea. It could be anything. We can't make any bets right now, and that's actually that's actually an issue that's facing the business community at large. It's actually an important event where we're going to get some information. One, what's the magnitude. We keep hearing 20% across the board, but it could just be reciprocal when other countries don't have big tariffs on us. There could be carve outs. There could be exemptions. There could be anything. We can tariff certain parts of the world and not tariff certain other parts of the world. We really don't know. It's going to be the thing that we have to do is just listen and digest the information that we get this afternoon from 4:00-5:00.

Mary Long: You hit on this point. Many other people have hit on this point. It's worth hitting on this point again that so much of the anxiety wrapped up in this event is that there is so much we don't know. We have no idea what's going to happen. That uncertainty is what's largely been tied to the freak-out that's been happening in the markets. We know markets love certainty. It sounds like we're going to get some details from 4:00-5:00 Eastern Time today. The result of those details might not be something that everyone is rooting for, but still, we'll have a bit more certainty then than we do now. Do you think that that certainty, however great or small it might be, will be enough to calm investors?

David Meier: I don't know. [LAUGHTER] I know that's a horrible answer, but here's the thing. This is the way markets tend to work. There's a set of expectations. What we have seen for a few weeks now, some days the markets are getting a little bit worried and the trend has been down. Investors are definitely thinking that there's perhaps some bad things coming forward when they look out into the future. There's a little bit of worry about recession. There's a little bit of worry about inflation coming up. If we get information where tariffs are higher than the market expects, that means that, oh, no, I need to change my expectations as investors. Something like that could put pressure on the market and cause it to go down. We've been hearing 20% across the board as the one thing that's been coming out pretty steadily. If it's 5% across the board, if that's not priced in, that could actually cause markets to jump. As far as calming investors, we don't know, but there's a little bit of level set right now where there's an expectation of something around 20% across a wide swath of the globe. Markets haven't really liked it for the most part, if you look at the general trend. It's also interesting that the White House moved this from 3:00-4:00 to wait until markets closed.

Mary Long: The Trump administration argues that tariffs are just one part of Trump's large economic agenda. The point behind them is that they will work to boost US manufacturing and American jobs. Short-term pain is expected to be a part of that process. Perhaps, why? We've seen this event move from 3:00-4:00. It explains the downward moves that the market's been making recently in the past quarter. Let's zoom out, and let's run a little bit with this longer term trajectory. When will we know if those intended long-term effects, more American manufacturing, more American jobs is actually starting to come true, even in spite of some continued short-term pain?

David Meier: It's a great question. It's actually a very Foolish question because ultimately, we don't want to necessarily be responding to the ultra short term. We want to figure out, longer term, what is this going to mean? I love what you've asked here. Unfortunately, increasing manufacturing, both from a plant standpoint as well as a job standpoint, that just takes a while. You can't just build a plant overnight. That's not how that works. When will we start seeing results? First of all, we got to figure out what's being said. Business leaders need to start figuring out, what does that mean? Some people have made some commitments already about, "Hey, we want to be a part of this. We want to bring manufacturing back."

But others like the CEO of Ford in an investor conference the other day, basically said, "Right now, it's all chaos and costs." Once you get enough information to remove the chaos and then actually figure out what the costs are, then we'll start to see businesses making plans. Then we'll start to hear, "This is what we're going to do in response to the tariff. We're going to go after this market. We're going to start making this many widgets. We're going to make them in this state by opening up a plant." Unfortunately, it's not going to be probably 3-6 months before we start seeing those business plans and serious business plans. Not just, "Hey we want to be a part of this," but here's actually what we're going to do. Here's how many dollars we're going to spend. Here's where we're going to build those plants. That's just unfortunately going to take a while, so we're going to have to be patient.

Mary Long: As you allude to, we're already starting to see some companies respond to these tariffs, and they're doing so in a number of different ways. You've got some like Johnson & Johnson, which just announced it's making commitments to boost its own US production. It's going to commit $55 billion in US investments over the next four years. That includes the development of three new manufacturing sites. You've got other companies like Walmart that are turning to their suppliers in Walmart's case, many Chinese manufacturers and are asking those suppliers to cut prices and essentially shoulder Trump's tariffs for the company. You've got other companies, Target and Best Buy, being two in particular that have warned customers about higher prices as they strive to preserve their own profit margins.

The opposite of that is Nike, which adjusted its margin guidance, suggesting, "Hey, it'll attempt to absorb the tariffs for the time being." There's still a lot of uncertainty, but we're already starting to see these different defensive moves come into play. If you are the CEO of David Meier Enterprises, and I intentionally kept that unspecific because it doesn't matter what industry these companies are in, but if you're a CEO of David Meier Enterprises, how would you be bracing your company for whatever tariffs might be coming down the pike later today?

David Meier: I'm going to work on the assumption that I make something that I'm a manufacturer because I think this will help illustrate some stuff. First of all, we knew this was coming. This was something that the new administration campaigned on. They've talked about ever since. We've seen companies do this, too. Hopefully, I've already made some advanced purchases of things that I think I'm going to need from other countries before the import tax, which is what a tariff is, gets put on the stuff I'm trying to buy. That's the first thing. The second thing is, I need to run some different scenarios. Again, if it's 5%, if it's 10%, if it's something ridiculous, like 50%, what does that mean for demand for my products? Hopefully, I've also done some scenario analysis.

Then I'm going to actually talk about something real quick as it relates to Walmart and then assume that my company has this as well. Walmart can be considered what is known as a monopsony, and that is essentially where one company is powerful enough to really control prices by their buying power. Think about Walmart. Huge company. Lots of stuff goes through there. Of course, they can go to their suppliers and say, "Look you don't have that many other options. We buy most of your stuff. We can go and find other suppliers and work with them.

We have plenty of people who want to work with us. You're going to have to take the pain here because we're not willing to bring that on the American consumer as Walmart." If I was fortunate enough to be in that position, as CEO of an enterprise that could do that, I would be telegraphing that to my suppliers as well, because what we want to do is try to make as many plans as possible before it comes. Then once we get the information, more information, better information to figure out this is the direction we want to go from this point forward. That's how, hopefully, I would have been preparing for, digest, and then say, "We now have the information to say, 'This is the direction our business needs to go' and then go."

Mary Long: We'll move on to related, but also unrelated story. Tesla dropped their first quarter delivery and production numbers this morning. Vehicle sales fell to an almost three-year low. Analysts had expected the company to sell more than 390,000 vehicles in the first quarter. The real number was shy of 340,000. Is this sales slump attributable to Musk backlash, or is there more to the story? How do you parse this out when you look at these numbers?

David Meier: A good question. There's actually a little more to this story. For a little additional context, I will also say that prediction markets were expecting about 356. Not only do you have experts say they were expecting 390, but you have wisdom of crowds saying 356, so this number is really was lower than a lot of people expected. Recently, Tesla has been having some struggles. It's not just for Musk backlash around the world based on what he has decided to do injecting himself into the global political scene. There was already a little bit of waning demand. Unfortunately, I think that people have said, "Hey this is not something that we agree with," and they were able to vote with their wallets and say, "Hey, we're not going to buy your car under these set of circumstances." It doesn't mean it won't change in the future, but right now. I think some of it is that this is a continuing trend that Tesla's experienced, but I believe that there's been a little bit of catalyst in terms of the backlash for how Musk has interjected himself into the global political scene.

Mary Long: This Tesla piece does tie to the tariff conversation that we were having earlier. Many Tesla vehicles are produced in the United States. The Model Y scores as number 1 on Cars.com's American-Made Index. Still, though, they do import an estimated 20-25 percent of goods from international sources. We don't have an exact number on that. That estimate comes from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, doesn't specify which countries Tesla imports from, but we know that it does get a number of its goods from international sources. A 25% tariff on all imported cars and car parts starts tomorrow, April 3. Tesla is one of the car makers that stands to be less affected by those tariffs because so much of its products are produced in the United States, but that tariff change that's rolling out to all automakers, might Tesla expect to see an uptick in vehicle sales in the nearest future because of that and changing dynamics in car prices?

David Meier: I certainly think it's possible, and you are right. One of the advantages of having less content produced outside the United States is that they have better visibility into the cost structure in a world where there are more tariffs. The other thing is Tesla's in an advantaged position. Who's to say they can't get an exemption on all those parts that they bring in from other countries? It's a very real possibility given the relationship that Musk has with the current administration. It is absolutely very possible. One of the things that Tesla has been doing is bringing down the prices for their cars in order to make them more affordable. In a situation where other substitutes, the competitors have to figure out what to do with the tariff and the amount that's been levied on them. How much are they going to pass along in terms of prices? How much are they going to deal with in terms of their margins?

This very well could give Tesla an advantage in the short term. What's interesting is the initial market reaction today on April 2 was the stock fell on the production and deliveries news, but last I checked at almost approaching noon, the stock was up, so investors taking a longer term view may be seeing that very same thing that you're talking about.

Mary Long: David Meier, always a pleasure to talk with you. Thanks so much for coming on the show this morning and helping us sort through and make sense of all of the uncertainty that we're seeing unfold today.

David Meier: Thanks, Mary. I really appreciate it.

Mary Long: How do you know if a company is walking the walk or just whispering some sweet nothings to shareholders? Up next, full contributor Jason Hall joins Ricky Mulvey for a look at two semiconductor companies, Texas Instruments and Taiwan Semi.

Ricky Mulvey: Jason, we are recording this approximately 48 hours before Tariff Liberation Day as we talk about two semiconductor manufacturers, we shall see what happens on that day. But we're taking some time to check in on Texas Instruments and Taiwan Semiconductor, primarily because I was watching Scoreboard on Fool Live and saw your take that you think that Texas Instruments will outperform Taiwan Semi over the next five years. I own both companies, so what an excuse to talk about them?

Jason Hall: Absolutely.

Ricky Mulvey: It's a little bit of an intro for people less familiar with this space, what is different about the chips that these companies make from each other?

Jason Hall: Basically everything, I think, is a summary of it. But Taiwan semiconductor, it's called TSMC in the industry parlance. TSMC is the manufacturer of basically 100% of the leading edge logic chips out there. You think about the chip in your smartphone that powers your smartphone. Obviously, NVIDIA's GPUs, anybody that follows that industry closely knows that TSMC is the company that makes the chips for their GPUs. The CPUs and GPUs, that's logic chips. Then you have memory chips that companies like Micron and others manufacture. Semiconductors, the leading edge stuff, that's TSMC. They also make the bulk of all of the used to be leading edge stuff because they've built out the capacity, and they're such an incredible operator. They do the contract manufacturing for the big fabulous semiconductor design companies. Basically, everybody that designs their own chips but doesn't make them.

If it's Apple, we mentioned NVIDIA, AMD is a big TSMC customer. Those companies go to TSMC to actually do the manufacturing. Texas Instruments is a fully vertically integrated semiconductor manufacturing. They do their own design. They work with some clients to design special needs chips, but a lot of it is just stuff that they've designed over the past 50 years. Some of the chips that they designed back in the 80s are still being sold to go in industrial machinery and that kind of stuff. They have a big direct sales channel on their website. Over 100,000 customers, and a lot of them just go on their website and find a part off the shelf and order directly from Texas Instruments. Now, here's the biggest separator is its chips are analog chips and integrated chips. The best way to think about what they make is the logic chips that TSMC makes and the memory and all that kind of stuff, all that stuff operates in the virtual world in the electrical electronic world. Those chips have to interface with the real world. They need to get power in. They need to send signal out. That's what Texas Instruments chips do. Is there how electronic devices actually interact and interface with the real world?

Ricky Mulvey: Both of these businesses, semiconductor stocks have historically been cyclical businesses, Taiwan Semi, definitely at a high point right now or highish point, I should say. Do you still see semiconductor stocks as cyclical businesses, and does that affect the way that you invest in them?

Jason Hall: Yeah, absolutely. Businesses are cyclical when their customers and end markets are cyclical. The end market for chips are still cyclical because of that reality. What has changed, Ricky, is the size of some of those end markets. We think about logic, that's TSMC and memory. Those industries have benefited from this explosion in demand for accelerated computing infrastructure. It's bigger than just AI. It goes before AI, is the Cloud, this accelerated computing infrastructure. Now more recently, of course, AI has been like the nuclear explosion in demand, and that's led to this super cycle for TSMC and some other companies that are reaping those gains, and the demand is so big. This new market is so big for those companies that they're more than making up for loss volume and revenue from other sectors that have been weaker, like PCs, consumer electronics, industrial and automotive.

Ricky Mulvey: Now let's separate these companies a little bit, both cyclicals, but both have different stories right now. Texas Instruments has come off a bit of a weak period, 2024, a bit of a down year from a revenue and operating profit perspective, and that has a lot to do with their embedded processing business. Can you explain what's going on there?

Jason Hall: Yeah, so there's definitely some kind of asynchronous cyclicality between its analog business and its integrated business. But the big thing that we're seeing broadly is that it's in the late stages of a transformation in its manufacturing. It's shifting to a larger form factor for its chip making that's going to give it some structural benefits. But there's a protracted downturn in demand across multiple end markets. We actually just saw the last quarter that it reported was the first quarter in about two years where its analog business actually showed just a little tiny bit of demand growth. We can go back to 2023 when demand was really down for its analog business. This is the larger business too. There were some periods where demand was actually up for the integrated business. It's a little bit of a difference in how different parts of the cycle can affect those key businesses. But again, the big key right now for Texas Instruments, is that not only is the business weak, but it's kind of exacerbating its bottom line because it's about three quarters of the way through this big capital project to spend to make some structural changes to its cost structure and its manufacturing that are going to eventually help the business do better, but the timing is just really tough.

Ricky Mulvey: In the past few years, extraordinarily strong for Taiwan semiconductor, its shareholders have been rewarded quite a bit. Why are you seeing an opposite story for that chip manufacturer?

Jason Hall: The easy answer here is AI, and it's largely the correct one. We've also seen some recovering demand in other areas like smartphones. But being essentially the only contract manufacturer that has both the capability and the capacity to make the most advanced chips, it's been a massive boon for TSMC. In one sentence, if you're NVIDIA's foundry, you're doing really well right now.

Ricky Mulvey: With TSMC, there's a different political component because it is sort of this national security infrastructure for Taiwan. China has had its eyes on Taiwan. It's an extraordinarily complicated story between the Taiwan and Greater China relationship. All of that is to say, if you are sitting in the United States, this is a company that carries some political risk that you probably don't fully understand. I don't fully understand it. How do you think about this if you're owning shares of TSMC, which I own a few shares of.

Jason Hall: I do, too. I think it's definitely kind of in the too hard pile for most people, and even the people that are true experts in this area of geopolitics and military threat and risk, would say the same thing. It's a bit of an unknowable but it is a legitimate threat. There's significant national security implications across every Western country if those chips were made unavailable. TSMC, of course, is taking steps to address this expansion in the US. We know that's been ongoing for a while. There's also expansion in Europe, multiple facilities are looking to bring online by around 2027. Now, here's the thing. Those moves might be great for getting diversification of chips to the market if there were a military event actually on Taiwan. But that's not really going to protect shareholders very much. I think it's important to decouple those kind of things down from one another. But what it really comes down to me for is thinking about individual risk tolerance. How much do you have? If you have some tolerance to be able to be exposed to that too hard pile sort of answer, then position sizing comes into play. I'm sure there are a lot of investors, Ricky, that have done incredibly well with TSMC over the past five, 10 years, that might find it prudent to reduce their exposure, take some of those profits now off the risk table, despite there still being a lot of growth potential still for TSMC.

Ricky Mulvey: I own Texas Instruments as well. When I bought the stock a few years ago, I found this was a leadership team that was saying all the right things. We measure our performance on free cash flow per share. This is something that activist investors Elliott Management has more recently sort of held management's feet to the fire. They point out on their investor relations page. Look at us. We've reduced share count by almost 50% over the past 20 years. But during this time, I'll say, over the past five years, this total return has underperformed the S&P 500, and for me, more importantly, it's underperformed the Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF SCHD, which is probably the more appropriate comparison, big strong companies that pay dividends. Management's saying the right things, but there's a little bit of a long term underperformance problem here. Jason, what's going on?

Jason Hall: We look at Rich Templeton, who the company has basically built in his image over the past quarter century. Over the past five years, we've gone from a transition to his second retirement to Haviv Ilan, who's a long term insider, who's now running the company, and some people might say, well, what's going on? What's the shift here? I want to push back a little bit here, Ricky. Yeah, it's underperform those indices, but over the past five years, it's earned an average of 14.7% annualized total returns. It's not like it's been a bad investment. It's just a period that the market's CAGR has been over 18%. Let's contextualize that a little bit. Also, again, think about the cycle. Shares are down some 20% from the high back in late 2024. All this is happening during a period where its end markets are weaker. Now, one more thing. If we've had this conversation just about any other time over the past few years, Texas Instruments total return would be a little bit better than the benchmark, even again, during that persistent downturn in demand. It's not like it's been a bad investment. It's just not doing as well as some of its peers, and again, it's trailed an incredibly good market.

Ricky Mulvey: Hey, I own the stock. Don't blame me. I'm just looking at the numbers here, Jason.

Jason Hall: [LAUGHTER] As a shareholder, I'm right along with you on this.

Ricky Mulvey: Let's get back to the original premise of this conversation. TXN greater than TSM over the next five years. So investors have been more excited about Taiwan Semiconductor. Texas instruments, it's doing boring stuff. It's checking the temperature on things. It's doing analog processes. This isn't the big explosive, exciting AI chip making stuff. why are you more bullish for the long term future of Texas Instruments than Taiwan Semiconductor right now?

Jason Hall: It gets back to the story of the cycle, and I think it's so important with these chip makers to remember that. High fixed costs. You leverage those fixed costs when demand is strong to make more money, take that money and reinvest in your business when the opportunity is there. Texas Instruments has been steadily spending money through the downturn, and I think that's made its stock maybe look a little more expensive on both earnings and cash flows. On the other side of the coin, TSMC's CapEx spending is actually down from the peak in 2023, and it's monetizing much of that spend already. Now, its CapEx is about to start ramping back up. We talk about all of the capital commitments it's made in the US and Europe. As it deploys that capital, it's going to be going for a couple of years before it really starts to get a return on that capital. So its shares might look a little cheaper than maybe they really are. I also think that we need to acknowledge that we always overinvest in these big buildouts. History has shown us that that is the reality. All of these businesses are in a land grab mode, and we're going to get to a point where there's going to be too much supply, and that will lead to the cycle turning for TSMC.

Now, there's going to be a shift from the buildout to the upgrade cycle, and I think we might be maybe closer to that shift from buildout to upgrade cycle than others do. The flip side of the coin here is that TSMC is going to continue to spend capital. TXN, on the other hand, is about three quarters of the way through its current CapEx cycle, which means that its CapEx is actually about to fall just as it starts to leverage the 300 millimeter wafer size for its chip manufacturing. This is going to give it some real structural cost advantages versus its competitors. In other words, its cash flows could really begin to soar in the years ahead making today's stock price that might look a little bit more expensive, really compelling for long term outperformance.

Ricky Mulvey: Jason Hall, I'm going to end it there. Appreciate your time and insight. Thanks for joining us for Motley Fool Money.

Jason Hall: Cheers, this was fun, Ricky.

Mary Long: As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial standards and are not approved by advertisers. With Motley Fool Money team, I'm Mary Long. We'll see you tomorrow.

David Meier has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Jason Hall has positions in Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, and Texas Instruments. Mary Long has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Ricky Mulvey has positions in Texas Instruments. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Apple, Best Buy, Nike, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Target, Tesla, Texas Instruments, and Walmart. The Motley Fool recommends Johnson & Johnson. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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