New York, Jan 2, 2026, 19:27 ET — After-hours
- Nike shares eased on the first trading day of 2026, lagging a mixed tape for consumer names.
- Traders remain focused on signs the company can steady margins and demand without heavy discounting.
Nike shares dipped 0.7% on Friday and were flat in after-hours trading — the electronic session after the 4 p.m. close — at $63.28. The stock traded between $62.58 and $64.18 in the session, with about 22.3 million shares changing hands.
The move matters because Nike has been trying to convince investors that a brand and distribution reset can lift demand without dragging profitability lower. The stock’s 52-week range underscores how sensitive that debate has been, with shares having traded between $52.28 and $82.44. MarketWatch
Nike’s latest quarterly filing showed why the market is still keyed to margins. Gross margin fell 300 basis points — 3 percentage points — to 40.6% in the quarter ended Nov. 30, hurt mainly by higher product costs including tariffs in North America and a lower average selling price linked to discounts and channel mix, the filing showed. SEC
U.S. stocks ended mixed in the first session of 2026, with the Dow closing up 0.66% and the S&P 500 up 0.19%, while the Nasdaq slipped 0.03% as chip stocks led and some consumer shares lagged, according to Reuters. “‘Buy the dip, sell the rip,’” said Joe Mazzola, head of trading and derivatives strategist at Charles Schwab, pointing to a short-term trading mindset in the market. Reuters
Other athletic and apparel names outperformed Nike on Friday. Under Armour’s UA shares rose 5.4% and its UAA shares gained 6.4%, while Deckers Outdoor — parent of Hoka — climbed 3.0% and Lululemon added 1.4%.
Nike-specific headlines were limited on Friday, leaving the stock to trade more in line with broader risk appetite and positioning into the new year. Investors have been quick to fade rallies and buy pullbacks in large consumer brands as they handicap the pace of rate cuts and the durability of demand.
Insider activity has also stayed on traders’ radar. A Form 4 — the SEC document insiders use to disclose stock transactions — showed CEO Elliott Hill bought 16,388 Nike Class B shares at a weighted-average $61.10 on Dec. 29, taking his directly held stake to 241,587 shares. Stock Titan
Even so, the purchase does not change the near-term pressure points for Nike: clearing product without deeper markdowns, stabilizing digital traffic, and rebuilding momentum in Greater China. Those factors have mattered more than one-off signals in recent months.
The next clear checkpoint is Nike’s next earnings report. The company is listed to report results on March 19, 2026, according to Yahoo Finance’s earnings calendar. Yahoo Finance
Between now and then, traders will be watching for any fresh read-throughs on U.S. consumer spending and freight-and-tariff costs that can move margin expectations. For Nike, that usually shows up in how quickly inventories normalize and whether wholesale growth can offset softness in its direct business.