Target cut prices on 5,000 products. Now it's back with a big earnings beat.

Slash prices on milk, meat, and bread in this inflation-battered economy, and the consumer is going to notice while wandering the supermarket aisles.

That's especially the case for the deal-seeking Target ( TGT ) shopper.

The discount retailer shredded Wall Street profit forecasts on Wednesday, topping them by $0.39 a share on the back of renewed traffic to stores. Traffic increased by 3%, with all six departments at Target contributing to the improvement.

Shares in Target jumped more than 13% in premarket trading after the report.

As Target CEO Brian Cornell tells it, the retailer's comeback quarter reflects a steady dose of price cuts this summer on 5,000 daily essentials — items where Target was losing market share to rival Walmart ( WMT ) for several quarters in a row.

"We feel great about the reaction that we're seeing from the consumer based on the 5,000 items where we've seen price reductions," Cornell told Yahoo Finance on a call with reporters. "It certainly contributed to traffic growth during the quarter — we expect that to continue over the balance of the year."

Cornell declined to say if more price cuts were coming.

Target stayed cautious with its full-year sales guidance as it enters the dueling peak seasons of back to school and the holidays. But it did lift its full-year profit forecast amid the second quarter beat and improved traffic trends.

"Walmart's second quarter earnings highlighted that value and convenience are resonating with consumers. We believe Target's heightened focus on value positions it well for [market] share gains going forward including improving price gaps and several new owned brand launches focused on value and entry level price points," Bank of America analyst Robbie Ohmes said in a client note.

The earnings rundown

What else caught our attention

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In the below Opening Bid episode, former Target board member and Medtronic ( MDT ) CEO Bill George shares what Starbucks ( SBUX ) and Boeing ( BA ) must do to turn themselves around.