Target in free fall: Retail giant’s market value plunges by $13billion as shares drop by 2.14%

Retail giant Target’s market value plummeted on Wednesday by $13 billion as shares dropped by a further 2.14 percent for the ninth consecutive day.

It comes as the chain seeks to recover from backlash against its female swimwear range which gives adult wearers the option to ‘tuck’ male genitalia.

The company’s market value had been $74 billion – with shares trading at $160.96 – as of May 17. But stock fell later that week when it made ‘adjustments’ to its Pride merchandising plans, including removing displays ‘that have been at the center of the most significant confrontational behavior’ at some of its stores, said CEO Brian Cornell in a statement last week.

Some Southern stores were forced to move merchandise – many of which were designed by Erik Carnell, a transgender man and self-proclaimed Satanist – to the back of stores.

It was done to avoid a ‘Bud Light situation’ – a disastrous marketing decision to promote Bud Light’s beer with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney – following a consumer boycott of its Pride Month items.

Erik Carnell, transgender designer and artist whose products were pulled by U.S. retailer Target from its Pride Collection amid backlash from some of their customers

Erik Carnell, transgender designer and artist whose products were pulled by U.S. retailer Target from its Pride Collection amid backlash from some of their customers

Pictured: Pride Adult Bikini Swim Bottom - Black - $25 at Target

Pictured: Pride Adult Bikini Swim Bottom - Black - $25 at Target

Pictured: Pride Adult Bikini Swim Bottom – Black – $25 at Target

Carnell – a British designer whose slogans include ‘Satan loves pronouns’ – introduced a collection featuring the transgender swimsuits, books called ‘bye bye binary’ and a handful of other items, which were pulled by Target. 

Carnell said his designs – which are printed on pins, stickers and T-shirts – have been labeled ‘Satanic’ – but were not those being sold in Target as part of Pride month.

Companies like Target that launch products and campaigns for Pride Month seek to profit from LGBTQ people but fail to stand by them when challenges arise, Carnell said.

‘It’s a very dangerous precedent to set, that if people just get riled up enough about the products that you’re selling, you can completely distance yourself from the LGBT community, when and if it’s convenient,’ said Carnell.

‘If you’re going to take a stance and say that you care about the LGBT community, you need to stand by that regardless.’

In tandem, LGBTQIA+ communities slammed the retailer, as did governor Gavin Newsom, who accused Target of ‘systematically attacking’ the gay community. 

He wrote on Twitter on May 24: ‘CEO of Target Brian Cornell selling out the LGBTQIA+ community to extremists is a real profile in courage. 

‘This isn’t just a couple stores in the South. There is a systematic attack on the gay community happening across the country. Wake up America. 

‘This doesn’t stop here. You’re black? You’re Asian? You’re Jewish? You’re a woman? You’re next.’

In retaliation, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene wrote: ‘No one is attacking the gay community Gavin. 

Retail giant Target's market value plummeted on Wednesday by $13 billion as shares dropped by a further 2.14 percent for the ninth consecutive day

Retail giant Target's market value plummeted on Wednesday by $13 billion as shares dropped by a further 2.14 percent for the ninth consecutive day

Retail giant Target’s market value plummeted on Wednesday by $13 billion as shares dropped by a further 2.14 percent for the ninth consecutive day

The swimsuits, which appear in sections set up for Pride month in June, include a label which advertises the 'tuck-friendly construction' and 'extra crotch' coverage. The design is made to help conceal a person's private parts

The swimsuits, which appear in sections set up for Pride month in June, include a label which advertises the 'tuck-friendly construction' and 'extra crotch' coverage. The design is made to help conceal a person's private parts

The swimsuits, which appear in sections set up for Pride month in June, include a label which advertises the ‘tuck-friendly construction’ and ‘extra crotch’ coverage. The design is made to help conceal a person’s private parts

Pride Month merchandise is displayed at a Target store on May 31, 2023 in San Francisco, California

Pride Month merchandise is displayed at a Target store on May 31, 2023 in San Francisco, California

Pride Month merchandise is displayed at a Target store on May 31, 2023 in San Francisco, California

‘They don’t want their children forcefully exposed to the radical side of pride with “tuck it” and “binding” children’s clothes and messaging while simply shopping at Target. We don’t support your California child genital mutilation industry. As a matter of fact, I want to end it.’

Angered consumers called for the retailer to be boycotted.

One wrote: ‘Target is far worse than Bud Light ever was. Time to boycott!!!’

Another said: ‘All Christians and religious need to boycott Target. We need to send a message to these woke companies that choose evil as their marketing tactic. It’s just sick. Target Pride Month partner boasts about Satanism: Satan Respects Pronouns.’

The retailer has been in the firing line for a host of other LGBTQIA+ related issues, which include an alleged partnership with a K-12 education group focusing on convincing schools to adopt policies which will help restrict parents’ knowledge about their child’s ongoing in-school gender transition. 

The education group, according to Fox, provides sexually explicit books to schools as part of its gender-based curriculum. 

Carlos Saavedra, Vice President, Brand Management at Target

Carlos Saavedra, Vice President, Brand Management at Target

Carlos Saavedra, Vice President, Brand Management at Target

Target CEO letter to employees defending decision to pull Pride Collection items 

Team –

I want to end the day where Briefly started: on a note of care. This has been a very hard day for Target, and it follows many difficult days of deliberation and decision-making.

To our team in Stores: thank you for steadfastly representing our values. No one is better at working through uncomfortable situations in service to an inclusive guest experience.

What you’ve seen in recent days went well beyond discomfort, and it has been gut-wrenching to see what you’ve confronted in our aisles.

To our team in the service centers, thank you for your patience and professionalism through high volumes of angry, abusive and threatening calls. I recognize how difficult and even frightening those interactions can be, and thank you for the composure with which you’ve fielded those comments.

To the teams who have been working so hard on our plans for Pride – and now are showing incredible agility as we adjust – thank you. Your efforts will ensure we can still show up and celebrate Pride in meaningful ways.

To the LGBTQIA+ community, one of the hardest parts in all of this was trying to contemplate how the adjustments we’re making to alleviate these threats to our team’s physical and psychological safety would impact you and your wellbeing and psychological safety. We stand with you now and will continue to do so – not just during Pride Month, but each and every day.

Those were the two guiding principles when it came time for us to act: do all we can to keep our team safe, and do all we can to honor our commitment and connection to the LGBTQIA+ community.

From a host of difficult alternatives, we have sincerely sought the best path forward, finding ways to recognize Pride Month, while making adjustments to prioritize safety. As always, we’re stronger together, and I want you to know that I’m committed to doing all I can, and all we can as a company, to support a culture across the country of care, empathy, equity and simple civility, in hopes that we’ll not have to face these kinds of agonizing decisions in the future.

Thank you for the care you’ve shown each other, our frontline teams and the LGBTQIA+ community.

BC

The group, the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network (GLSEN) received roughly $2.1 million from Target in donations. The organization offers guidance about how to hide gender transitioning from parents. 

Carlos Saavedra, 43, is Target’s vice president for brand management and also volunteers as a director at GLSEN.

Saavedra joined target in July 2019 and was made Vice President, Brand Management in January 2021, according to his LinkedIn page.

His profile says he joined GLSEN as a board member in May 2019 and was elected to the executive committee as treasurer in November 2021.

Saavedra’s profile explains the organization’s mission is ‘helping create safe spaces in schools for LGBTQIA+ students’.

On May 30, a pro-Trump rapper’s new single demanding consumers boycott Target shot to number one on iTunes’ Top Ten Chart – beating out artists like Taylor Swift in the process.

Meanwhile, the Florida man behind the song’s historic ascension, alt-right emcee Forgiato Blow, has continued to accuse the music platform of purposely putting a clamp on the song’s progress due to its conservative message.

Titled Boycott Target, the two-minute track comes in direct response to the superstore’s newly announced Pride Collection.

Moreover, it features lyrics that accuse the stalwart department store of attempting to instill an LGBTQ ‘agenda’ with their aggressive clothing campaign – which itself touts several polarizing items including the ‘tuck-friendly’ bathing suits and pro-trans T-shirts for kids.

In the midst of a meteoric – and unlikely – rise that has already likely seen him secure well over $1million, Blow appeared for an interview to decry iTunes for what he alleged is censorship, while taking the time to offer some choice words to brass responsible for the progressive push.

‘It’s shadow-banned all over the world right now,’ Blow told outspoken anchor Brian Kilmeade Monday, using terminology that refers to a certain form of censorship that see a user’s content blocked from part or all of an online forum without warning.

Utilized in the past by big name platforms such as Twitter and YouTube amid a recent rise in heated political discourse – often to mixed results – is a known stealthy strategy platforms limit posts’ visibility.

Speaking with Kilmeade during the day’s Fox and Friends broadcast, Blow elaborated on what he believes to be a conspiracy concocted by the Apple-operated application – despite his song already topping iTunes’ Hip Hop chart at the time, and standing at the number-two spot on the platform’s hallowed all-genre list.

‘You can’t even search the song on iTunes without going to the music video and clicking the external link,’ Blow claimed.

‘They’re trying their hardest to keep it off the radar.’

Shortly after the televised interview, the track’s popularity continued to burgeon – propelling it to the overall No.1 spot around midday Tuesday.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Dailymail.co.uk