Wall Street's enthusiasm for Target Corp. began to fade long before the data breach and CEO Gregg Steinhafel's abrupt departure Monday.

A closer look shows that analyst support for the Minneapolis-based retailer started slipping as far back as August, shortly after the stock hit an all-time high of $73.50 in July. Shares fell another 3.7 percent Tuesday to $57.64, after dropping 3.5 percent Monday.

More telling is data from Bloomberg, which shows that just a third of the analysts who cover Target rate the stock a "buy," the lowest percentage of buy support the company has had in the last five years. By contrast, more than 80 percent of analysts had buy recommendations on the stock in 2011, a strong indication that Target might have hit its peak a while ago.

Such dwindling confidence on Wall Street, along with weak sales, missteps in Canada and the colossal data breach, likely culminated in Steinhafel's resignation as opposed to any one thing.

"I wonder if it was just one of those things where it's been wearing on him and it's been wearing on them," Brian Yarbrough, an analyst with Edward Jones, said Tuesday. "It was not working."

Dustee Jenkins, a Target spokeswoman, said Steinhafel and the board agreed that it was the right time for him to step down since they have charted out a "clear path forward" after the breach and are working to accelerate the company's transformation related to its multichannel sales efforts.

As for interim CEO John Mulligan, she said he has been telling his team that "interim does not equal idle." He met with the company's leadership team on Monday and had more meetings on Tuesday.

The timing of Steinhafel's departure seemed to further unnerve investors this week as speculation swirled that Target will soon report disappointing profits. The quarter ended Saturday, just two days before Target said Steinhafel was out, leading many to believe that poor results may have precipitated his resignation.

But analysts noted Tuesday that Target would likely have lowered its forecast if that were the case.

"In conjunction with this announcement, if there was to be a material earnings miss, management would normally have updated guidance," BMO Capital Markets analyst Wayne Hood wrote in a research note this week.

He added that he was therefore not expecting a big surprise when Target announces its results on May 21.

Assessing company 'spin'

Robin Lewis, CEO of the Robin Report, a retail strategy newsletter, said the timing of the resignation could be tied into the first-quarter results in a different way. By shaking things up now, the company can talk about this leadership change as proof that it's taking steps to improve the situation when it reports its numbers.

"They can spin it to say to people, 'We're on the right track now — we've fixed it,' " Lewis said.

Lewis added that Target probably kept Steinhafel in place for so many months after the breach to help steady the ship in the midst of the storm.

"If they decided to get rid of him right after that happened, it would have added further disruption into an already-disrupted business, particularly at that time of year," he said, referring to the crucial holiday season.

Analysts also said it may be too early for Target to adjust its long-term guidance for the rest of the year.

Said Piper Jaffray senior research analyst Sean Naughton: "At this point it is a little early to speculate that they'd change their full-year guidance. … There is a lot of opportunity to gain ground in the year."

Mulligan indicated Tuesday in a question-and-answer forum on the company's "A Bullseye View'' website that he and the rest of the Target's management team would move quickly to continue the transformation of the company.

Morningstar analyst Ken Perkins said in a research note that it's hard to tell whether the data breach or the disappointing Canadian expansion last year played a bigger role in Steinhafel's departure.

However, he said he suspects the decision to enter Canada was a "major contributor," which accounted for about $1 billion in operating losses for Target in its most recent fiscal year.

The credit rating agency Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, which analyzes the company's debt, said on Monday that its ratings and outlook on Target Corp. would not be immediately affected by the resignation of Steinhafel. The rating agency is expecting moderate performance gains in the next two years.

patrick.kennedy@startribune.com • 612-673-7926

kavita.kumar@startribune.com • 612-673-4113