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Mayor Of New York ERUPTS After Target SHUTS DOWN All Locations In New York

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Target announced today that it's closing

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nine stores in major cities next month

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because of theft and organized retail

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crime. Right now, at this very moment,

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Target closed a store in East Harlem and

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told New York why. What happened next

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says something about where things stand

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between the city and the businesses

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still deciding whether to stay. The

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announcement came in September 2025.

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Target confirmed it was shuttering nine

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locations across four states effective

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October 21st. One of those stores was in

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Harlem. The others were in Seattle, the

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San Francisco Bay area, and Portland.

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The company didn't bury the reason or

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soften it in corporate language. The

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statement was direct. Theft and

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organized retail crime were threatening

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the safety of workers and customers

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[music] and contributing to what Target

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called unsustainable business

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performance. Those weren't talking

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points assembled after the fact. They

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were the conclusions of a company that

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had been tracking a specific problem for

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more than a year and had run out of

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patience with waiting for it to improve.

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CEO Brian Cornell had been raising

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alarms publicly well before the

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closures. On an earnings call in May of

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that year, he told analysts that

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organized retail crime, had escalated at

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Target stores to a level the company had

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never seen. The financial impact was

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specific and staggering. shrinkage, the

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industry term for inventory loss to

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theft, was expected to reduce Target's

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fullear profitability by more than $500

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million compared to the prior year. On

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top of 700 to $800 million in theft

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related losses the year before, the math

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was pointing somewhere that no retailer

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wants to go. By August, Cornell had

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added another number to the case.

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Violent incidents at Target stores had

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increased 120% in the first 5 months of

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the year compared to the same period 12

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months earlier. not 5%, not 20, 120.

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Cornell told investors directly that

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safety incidents associated with theft

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were moving in the wrong direction. He

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also said in May, something that

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deserves to be quoted accurately because

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it frames everything that came after.

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When asked whether Target planned to

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close stores due to rising theft,

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Cornell pushed back. His words were, "We

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do not want to close stores. We know how

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important our stores are. They create

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local jobs. They generate taxes. They're

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very important for those local shoppers

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and they play a critical role in

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communities across the country. He said

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Target would continue to do everything

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in its power to keep its doors open.

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4 months later, it closed nine of them

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anyway. The East Harlem closure hit a

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neighborhood that understood exactly

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what it meant. The store had served a

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community where affordable retail

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options were not abundant, where

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residents depended on accessible prices

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for groceries and everyday essentials,

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and where losing a major anchor tenant

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doesn't get replaced quickly or easily.

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For the workers who found out their

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store was closing, the corporate

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explanation about theft metrics and

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safety incidents didn't make the news

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any easier to absorb. Whatever the

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reasons, the result was the same. Jobs

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were gone. A neighborhood resource was

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gone. and the people who depended on

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both were left to figure out what came

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next. New York officials responded with

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the kind of institutional frustration

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that tends to follow announcements like

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this one. The framing from city and

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state leaders leaned toward corporate

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abandonment rather than business

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necessity. Questions were raised about a

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company that reports tens of billions in

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annual revenue choosing to close stores

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in neighborhoods that needed them. Some

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officials pointed to the history of

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retailers entering New York markets with

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tax incentives and regulatory

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accommodations, arguing that benefits

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extracted from the public created

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obligations that couldn't simply be

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walked away from when conditions got

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difficult. The push back was

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understandable in human terms, but the

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response largely avoided engaging with

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the specific facts Target had laid out.

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The company hadn't cited abstract

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business [music] strategy. It had cited

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a 120% increase in violent incidents. It

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had cited $500 million in projected

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losses from theft. It had cited a

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documented safety crisis that had been

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building long enough that the company

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had already exhausted alternatives

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before reaching the decision to close.

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That case doesn't get weaker because a

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retailer is profitable nationally. It

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gets made store by store, block by

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block, based on conditions that vary

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dramatically across a portfolio of

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nearly 2,000 locations. Target was also

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not alone in making this argument.

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Walgreens and CVS had been shuttering

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urban locations for similar reasons for

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years, citing the same convergence of

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cost pressure and theft. Walmart's CEO

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had gone on record warning that theft

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trends could force store closures and

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push prices higher. Home Depot described

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organized retail crime as a consistent

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pressure it was fighting daily. The

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retail industry's public conversation

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about shrink and safety had reached a

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level of cander unusual for a sector

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that typically prefers to keep its

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operational headaches private. The fact

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that so many companies were saying the

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same things independently about the same

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problems in the same kinds of markets

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suggested the problem wasn't corporate

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narrative management. It was an actual

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condition on the ground. There's a

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counterargument that deserves to be

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taken seriously because the full picture

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is more complicated than any single data

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point. An investigation by CNBC in late

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2023 found something that complicated

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targets specific framing. Crime rates at

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nearby Target locations that remained

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open were in several cases higher than

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at the stores that were closed. That

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finding raised questions about whether

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theft was the complete explanation for

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closure decisions or whether

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underperforming stores were being

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shuttered for business reasons that

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theft provided useful cover for. Cornell

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and Target pushed back, maintaining that

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each closure reflected specific safety

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and operational conditions at each

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location. But the scrutiny was

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legitimate and the honest version of

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this story has to include it. What isn't

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disputed is what happened to Target as a

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company in the years that followed the

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closures. The problems that preceded the

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Harlem decision didn't resolve after

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October 2023. They deepened. In January

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2025, Target announced it was

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eliminating its diversity, equity, and

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inclusion programs, aligning with the

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political direction of the new federal

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administration. The backlash was

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immediate and sustained. Customers who

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had viewed Target as a values aligned

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retailer felt blindsided. A boycott took

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hold across social media and critically

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it showed up in the numbers. Comparable

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store sales fell 3.8% in the first

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quarter of 2025. Overall revenue dropped

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from $ 24.5 billion to $23.8 billion.

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Foot traffic declined for eight

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consecutive weeks. The stock lost more

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than a third of its value and wiped out

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over $20 billion in shareholder worth.

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Tariffs compounded the damage. President

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Trump's import duties pushed up

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merchandise costs across Target's

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product mix, squeezing the margins on

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everything from electronics to household

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basics at precisely the moment consumer

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confidence was falling and customers

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were already reconsidering where to

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spend. Cornell acknowledged the

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compounding pressure publicly. His words

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on an earnings call were unambiguous.

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The company was not satisfied with its

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results and was moving with urgency to

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navigate through a period of volatility.

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In August 2025, Brian Cornell announced

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