Nike, Inc. (NYSE: NKE) stock fell sharply on Friday, December 19, 2025, after the athleticwear giant posted fiscal second-quarter results that beat revenue and earnings expectations—but showed continued pressure on profit margins and another steep decline in Greater China sales. By late morning New York trading, Nike shares were around $60, down roughly 8% on the day, after touching an intraday low near $58. [1]
The selloff underscores what has become the central debate around Nike stock: whether the company’s multi-quarter turnaround under CEO Elliott Hill can overcome a difficult mix of tariff-driven cost inflation, promotion-heavy inventory cleanup, and stubborn weakness in China, a region that investors once viewed as Nike’s most reliable growth engine. [2]
Why Nike stock dropped despite a top-line beat
On the surface, Nike’s quarter had some positives. Revenue for the period ended November 30, 2025 came in at $12.4 billion (up 1% year over year), and diluted EPS was $0.53. [3]
But investors focused on what’s happening beneath the headline numbers:
- Gross margin fell 300 basis points to 40.6%, with Nike citing higher tariffs as a primary driver. [4]
- Net income dropped 32% to about $0.8 billion, reinforcing that profitability remains under pressure even as the company works to reset product and channel strategy. [5]
- Management signaled that margin pressure is not finished, with Reuters reporting Nike expects margins to decline again in the current quarter. [6]
In other words: Nike beat expectations, but the market didn’t see enough evidence yet that earnings power is stabilizing—or that the turnaround has a clear timeline.
The key numbers from Nike’s fiscal Q2 2026 report
Nike’s own release laid out a quarter defined by a mix shift: wholesale strength (especially in North America) offset by weaker direct-to-consumer trends and major declines in Converse and China.
Here are the most closely watched figures from the company’s fiscal Q2 report:
- Revenue: $12.4B (+1% YoY) [7]
- Wholesale revenue: $7.5B (+8%) [8]
- NIKE Direct revenue: $4.6B (down 8%); Nike noted a 14% drop in NIKE Brand Digital and a 3% decline in NIKE-owned stores [9]
- Gross margin: 40.6% (down 300 bps) [10]
- Inventories: $7.7B (down 3%) [11]
- Converse revenue: $300M (down 30%) [12]
On geography, Nike’s revenue split highlighted why traders reacted so strongly to the print: North America grew, but Greater China dropped hard.
- North America revenue: $5.633B (+9%) [13]
- EMEA revenue: totals in the release indicate modest growth overall, with category-level mixed results [14]
- Greater China revenue: $1.423B (down 17%) [15]
Tariffs are now a headline risk for Nike’s margins
One of the most market-moving lines in the post-earnings coverage was the size of the tariff hit.
Reuters reported that Nike’s CFO reiterated expectations that tariffs tied to Southeast Asian manufacturing—where Nike produces a large share of its products—would cost the company $1.5 billion this year. [16]
Nike also explicitly attributed the quarter’s gross margin decline primarily to higher tariffs in North America, making the issue difficult for investors to ignore. [17]
For Nike stock, this matters because margins are the “proof point” investors typically demand during a turnaround. When margin pressure persists—even while sales hold up—Wall Street tends to assume the recovery will take longer and cost more.
China remains the swing factor for Nike’s turnaround
If tariffs are the margin story, China is the growth story—and right now, it’s going the wrong way.
Reuters reported that Nike’s sales in China fell for a sixth straight quarter, and that Hill told analysts, “It’s clear we need to reset our approach to the China marketplace.” [18]
The details add to the concern:
- Nike’s footwear sales in Greater China fell 21% in the quarter, per Nike’s published divisional revenue tables. [19]
- Reuters highlighted intensifying competition from domestic Chinese players like Anta and Li-Ning, and pointed to weakness in Nike’s online channel in the region. [20]
- Reuters also said Nike’s stock is down 13% year to date and is on track for a fourth straight year of declines, illustrating how long the market has been waiting for a durable turnaround signal. [21]
The strategic challenge in China is especially complex because Nike’s playbook there historically leaned heavily on brand heat and premium pricing. If consumer demand shifts toward domestic brands—or toward less logo-forward styles—Nike’s recovery requires more than promotions. It requires product momentum and a channel strategy that works locally.
Nike’s guidance: cautious tone heading into the holiday quarter
Nike’s fiscal third quarter includes the key December holiday shopping period. That’s why the company’s forward outlook became a major catalyst for the stock move.
Reuters reported Nike expects third-quarter revenue to be down in the low-single digits, a cautious stance that contrasted with what investors wanted to hear heading into a critical selling season. [22]
Separately, Zacks (via a widely syndicated note) reported management expects gross margin in Q3 to decline roughly 175–225 basis points. [23]
Put together, the message for Nike shareholders was straightforward: even if the turnaround is progressing in certain areas, near-term financials may stay bumpy—especially on profitability.
What analysts changed on December 19, 2025: price targets and turnaround timelines
Friday’s Nike stock drop immediately triggered a wave of refreshed analyst notes and revised targets—some bearish on timing, others arguing the selloff may be overdone.
UBS: target cut to $62, warns valuation still assumes a strong recovery
UBS lowered its Nike price target to $62 from $71 while maintaining a Neutral rating, saying the turnaround is taking longer than expected and that inventory rightsizing needs more time. UBS also argued Nike’s valuation still prices in a meaningful recovery, citing an approximately 40x forward P/E in its commentary. [24]
Despite the caution, UBS outlined a longer-term path back to mid-single-digit sales growth and roughly 10% EBIT margin, and projected Nike could earn about $3.00 per share five years out (fiscal 2031). [25]
Piper Sandler: target lowered to $75, but keeps an Overweight rating
Piper Sandler cut its target to $75 from $84 while maintaining Overweight, highlighting mixed regional performance and noting China could take longer to recover. Piper also pointed to strength in Nike’s Running category, describing growth above 20% for a second straight quarter. [26]
Other firms: a mixed set of cuts and holds
Investing.com’s roundup of analyst activity also referenced additional target changes in the wake of the quarter, including:
- Truist lowering to $70
- BofA Securities lowering to $73
- Bernstein lowering to $85
- Stifel lowering to $65 [27]
And while some analysts reduced targets on timing concerns, Barron’s reported at least one notable bull case: Jefferies’ Randal Konik reiterated optimism with a $110 target, while Needham cut its target to $68. [28]
The takeaway for Nike stock watchers: Wall Street isn’t aligned on near-term execution risk, but many analysts still see upside if Nike can stabilize China and rebuild margin.
Nike stock forecast ranges: where consensus stands now
Because price targets differ by methodology and dataset, consensus snapshots can vary—but they help show the overall shape of expectations.
- MarketBeat’s consensus view (based on 38 analysts) showed a “Moderate Buy” rating and a $77.90 consensus price target, with a high target of $115 and a low of $58 (at the time shown). [29]
- Markets Insider displayed a broader set of analyst forecasts, citing a median target in the high-$80s with a wide high/low range (its data reflects a different analyst count and timing). [30]
For investors following Nike stock (NKE), the dispersion itself is meaningful: it reflects uncertainty about how quickly Nike can convert today’s “fix-the-business” actions into consistent growth and improving profitability.
The bull case for Nike stock: what could go right in 2026
Nike’s optimistic narrative hinges on the idea that the current pain is transitional—necessary to restore brand heat, improve channel health, and re-accelerate innovation.
Key supports for the bull case include:
- Wholesale momentum and partner rebuilding. Nike’s wholesale revenue rose 8% overall, while NIKE Direct declined—consistent with a strategy of rebalancing channels and strengthening retailer relationships. [31]
- North America resilience. North America revenue grew 9% to $5.633B, suggesting Nike’s core market is stabilizing even while other regions struggle. [32]
- Inventory discipline. Inventories fell 3% to $7.7B, a sign Nike is actively managing stock levels even amid cost pressures. [33]
- Product and brand pipeline. Reuters noted that new product lines like NikeSKIMS have shown promise, even as other parts of the portfolio (including Jordan and Converse) need improvement. [34]
If tariffs ease, promotional activity slows, and Nike’s product cycle improves, the market could re-rate Nike stock quickly—because the brand still has global scale and premium positioning.
The bear case: why Nike shares could stay under pressure
The downside argument is that Nike’s challenges are not only cyclical or self-inflicted—they may also be structural.
Bearish risks highlighted in today’s news cycle include:
- Persistent margin compression. Nike already posted a 300-bps gross margin decline and expects further pressure, raising the risk that earnings recovery lags revenue recovery. [35]
- China uncertainty with no clear timetable. Reuters reported analysts pressed management for timelines around China, while local competition remains fierce and Nike acknowledges the need for a reset. [36]
- Digital weakness and DTC slowdown. NIKE Direct revenue fell 8%, and Nike said NIKE Brand Digital declined 14%—a challenge because digital is typically a higher-margin growth lever. [37]
- Converse decline. Converse revenue fell 30%, adding another moving piece to fix at the portfolio level. [38]
Put simply, the bear case says Nike may be fighting multiple battles at once—tariffs, competition, channel reset, and regional demand shifts—making a clean turnaround harder to execute.
What to watch next for Nike stock investors
With Nike shares reacting violently to Q2 results, the next few quarters are likely to be driven by a handful of measurable signals rather than broad branding narratives.
Key catalysts and checkpoints:
- Holiday-quarter demand and promotions: Can Nike protect pricing and reduce discounting as it clears legacy inventory? [39]
- Gross margin trajectory: Investors will watch whether the tariff headwind and channel mix shift stabilize—or worsen. [40]
- China “reset” execution: Any sign of improving traffic, product resonance, or digital stabilization in Greater China could change sentiment quickly. [41]
- Direct-to-consumer and digital recovery: Nike has to prove NIKE Direct declines are strategic and temporary—not a sign of weakening consumer pull. [42]
- Analyst revisions and earnings estimate resets: The wave of price target changes on Dec. 19 shows the Street is actively re-underwriting the story. [43]
References
1. www.marketbeat.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. investors.nike.com, 4. investors.nike.com, 5. investors.nike.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. investors.nike.com, 8. investors.nike.com, 9. investors.nike.com, 10. investors.nike.com, 11. investors.nike.com, 12. investors.nike.com, 13. investors.nike.com, 14. investors.nike.com, 15. investors.nike.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. investors.nike.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. investors.nike.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. finviz.com, 24. uk.investing.com, 25. uk.investing.com, 26. www.investing.com, 27. uk.investing.com, 28. www.barrons.com, 29. www.marketbeat.com, 30. markets.businessinsider.com, 31. investors.nike.com, 32. investors.nike.com, 33. investors.nike.com, 34. www.reuters.com, 35. investors.nike.com, 36. www.reuters.com, 37. investors.nike.com, 38. investors.nike.com, 39. www.reuters.com, 40. investors.nike.com, 41. www.reuters.com, 42. investors.nike.com, 43. uk.investing.com


