Target Corporation reported a solid Q4 2025, delivering revenue of $31.919 billion and a gross profit of $7.894 billion, with gross margin of 24.73% and an operating margin of 5.86%. Net income of $1.382 billion and earnings per share of $2.99 reflect a modest year-over-year improvement, paired with a meaningful sequential rebound in profitability metrics driven by continued cost discipline and mix optimization. Cash flow generation remained robust, with operating cash flow of $3.289 billion and free cash flow of $2.435 billion, underpinning deleveraging efforts and capital returns.
From a balance sheet perspective, Target maintains a sizable asset base and liquidity position, including cash and cash equivalents of ~$3.81 billion, total assets of ~$55.36 billion, and net debt of ~$15.84 billion. While liquidity metrics exhibit a near-term liquidity constraint (current ratio ~0.91), the strong FCF enables ongoing capital allocation flexibility (dividends and modest buybacks) and supports working capital management in a highly promotional seasonal retail environment.
Looking ahead, the company faces a competitive backdrop with peers like Walmart and e-commerce platforms continuing to influence traffic and mix. Investors should monitor gross margin progression, inventory productivity, SG&A efficiency, and the trajectory of cash conversion in the coming quarters. Given Targetβs free cash flow generation and a reasonable valuation (P/E around low double-digits versus peers in higher bands), the stock presents a balance of defensiveness and upside optionality if the company sustains margin improvement and disciplined capital allocation.