NEW YORK, Jan 4, 2026, 12:45 ET — Market closed
- Nike shares ended Friday down 0.7% at $63.28, lagging several apparel and footwear peers. StockAnalysis
- The company’s $0.41 quarterly dividend was payable on Jan. 2, with investors still parsing recent insider buying.
- Next week’s U.S. jobs report on Jan. 9 is a key macro test ahead of Nike’s next earnings, expected March 19. Yahoo Finance
Nike, Inc. shares slipped in the first trading session of 2026, closing Friday down 0.67% at $63.28. The stock traded between $62.55 and $64.13, with about 22.2 million shares changing hands. StockAnalysis
That matters now because Nike is trying to stabilize a multi-quarter reset while investors look for early proof the turnaround is working. In its last quarterly report, Nike said gross margin fell 300 basis points — three percentage points — to 40.6%, and Nike Direct revenue declined as digital sales dropped 14%.
Macro risk is back in focus for consumer names after the holiday week. The U.S. Labor Department’s Employment Situation report for December is scheduled for Jan. 9 at 8:30 a.m. ET, a data point that can swing rate expectations and sentiment toward discretionary spending.
Nike’s shareholder returns also got a calendar marker on Friday. The company previously said a $0.41 quarterly dividend was payable on Jan. 2 to shareholders of record as of Dec. 1.
In Friday’s tape, Nike underperformed several close-watched peers. Under Armour rose 5.6% and Deckers Brands gained about 3%, while Nike finished lower, reflecting a still-choppy setup for big athletic brands heading into the new year. MarketWatch
Technically, Nike remains well off its highs. Shares are about 23% below the 52-week high and roughly 21% above the 52-week low, and they sit modestly below key moving averages — rolling price gauges traders use to read trend strength — according to Finviz data. Finviz
Insider activity has been a recent support point. A Form 4 filing showed CEO Elliott Hill bought 16,388 shares on Dec. 29 at a weighted average price around $61.10, with purchases executed in a narrow range.
Nike also drew attention late last month after Apple CEO Tim Cook, a Nike director, bought roughly $3 million worth of shares. Baird analyst Jonathan Komp called the purchase a “positive sign” for the progress under Hill’s turnaround actions, Reuters reported.
But Nike’s reset still has clear fault lines: margin pressure tied to tariffs, weaker demand in China, and the risk that clearing inventory leans too heavily on discounting — a mix that has kept traders cautious even when revenue beats.
The next big checkpoints are calendar-driven. Investors will watch the Jan. 9 U.S. jobs report for the macro read-through, then shift back to company execution ahead of Nike’s next earnings report, expected on March 19, according to the Yahoo Finance earnings calendar. Yahoo Finance