Target drops mandatory retirement age, allowing CEO Cornell to stay

Target CEO Brian Cornell talks diversity goals, inflation and pandemic challenges

Target is dropping the mandatory retirement age for its CEO, allowing Chief Executive Brian Cornell to stay on for three more years.

Cornell, 63, would have passed the age of 65 in that span.

"In discussions about the company's longer-term plans, it was important to us as a board to assure our stakeholders that Brian intends to stay in his role beyond the traditional retirement age of 65," said Monica Lozano, the lead independent director of Target's board in a release on Wednesday.

Sales at the discount retailer have grown steadily since Cornell took the top job in 2014.

Brian Cornell, chief executive officer and chairman of Target Corp., smiles during a Bloomberg Television interview in New York, U.S., on Tuesday, March 5, 2019. The company waived its mandatory retirement age on Wednesday, September 7, 2022, allowing Cornell, 63, to stay in his role for three more years. Sarah Blesener/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Minneapolis-based chain had been accelerating its online services such as curbside pickup and same-day services while sprucing up its stores. During the height of the health crisis, Target became a lifeline to millions of people trying to limit their exposure during the pandemic.

The company has also been out front with its investment with workers. It raised its minimum wage to $15 per hour in 2020, a commitment it pledged in 2017 and well ahead of many grocery rivals. Earlier this year, Target adopted minimum wages that range from $15 to $24 an hour, with the highest pay going to hires in the most competitive markets.

But now the company, like other retailers, is trying to navigate tremendous shifts in consumer behavior with the worst of the pandemic in the rear view mirror. It's also wrestling with soaring prices and rising wages for workers. Target reported solid sales for the fiscal second quarter, but its profit plunged nearly 90% after it was forced to slash prices to clear unwanted inventories of clothing, home goods and electronics.

Target pushes to invest in more Black entrepreneurs

Before joining Target, Cornell spent more than 30 years in escalating leadership positions at retail and consumer-product companies. Roles included chief marketing officer at Safeway Inc. and CEO at Michaels, Walmart's Sam's Club and PepsiCo Americas Foods.

The company also announced Wednesday that Arthur Valdez, executive vice president and chief supply chain and logistics officer, will retire. Valdez will be succeeded by Gretchen McCarthy, senior vice president of global inventory management.

After an early morning dip, shares of Target rose $2.30 to $166.18 on Wednesday.

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