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Target Corp appointed longtime executive Michael Fiddelke as CEO in early February as the retailer fights declining sales and investor scrutiny.
Fiddelke, who had been COO, outlined priorities to sharpen merchandising, modernize stores and digital platforms, and accelerate a roughly $5 billion capital investment to revive growth.
His arrival was met with protests at Target’s Minneapolis headquarters and at about two dozen stores, with demonstrators and community groups accusing the company of allowing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations on or near its properties and demanding a public stance and staff training.
The American Federation of Teachers, which says members hold roughly 6.8 million Target shares via pension funds, urged the company to condemn ICE activity.
Target has reported consecutive quarters of soft sales — recent third-quarter revenue of $25.3 billion was down 1.5% year-on-year — and a nearly 30% decline in its share price over three years.
The protests have added reputational and operational pressure just as Fiddelke seeks to restore the chain’s merchandising identity and customer trust.
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GuruFocus New ArticleTarget (TGT) Faces Challenges as New CEO Aims to Rebuild Trust
Latest news RSSTarget's New CEO Gets Brutal Welcome: Protesters Storm HQ on First Day Over ICE Operations
GuruFocus New ArticleTarget (TGT) Faces Challenges Amid CEO Transition and Protests
















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