New York, Feb 13, 2026, 18:12 EST — After-hours
Nike Inc finished Friday up 3.2%, landing at $63.07. After hours, the stock edged down by 2 cents to $63.05 as of 6:09 p.m. Eastern. (MarketBeat)
Investors are watching to see if Nike’s turnaround is leading to a leaner structure and more predictable performance. Late Thursday, Reuters reported that Converse, which is owned by Nike, is trimming corporate staff as part of a shift to better align with its parent company. According to a source, “some roles are being eliminated” and “many more will shift” in terms of scope and reporting lines. (Reuters)
Nike’s board signed off on a quarterly cash dividend of $0.41 per share for both Class A and Class B stock, with a payment date set for April 1. Shareholders must be on the books by the close of business March 2 to qualify. Moves like this can have an impact on sentiment, particularly while the company is working through internal changes and signaling for investor patience. (Nike Investor Relations)
Trading was unsettled across the board. The S&P 500 managed a 0.05% gain, while the Nasdaq slipped 0.22%. U.S. consumer prices in January came in below forecasts, according to Reuters. “Large cap tech stocks continue to be an anchor on the market,” Michael James, managing director at Rosenblatt Securities, said. (Reuters)
Nike’s top legal executive, Robert Leinwand, unloaded 9,065 Class B shares at $62.33 apiece on Feb. 12, according to a Form 4 filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The document indicates the sale was made under a 10b5-1 trading plan, a mechanism allowing pre-scheduled transactions, and points to company rules governing when insiders can trade after earnings. (SEC)
Because the Dow is price-weighted, even a small move in Nike’s stock tends to ripple through the index. MarketWatch points out that every $1 change in Nike shares shifts the Dow by about 6.16 points. (MarketWatch)
Still, the rebound doesn’t wipe out the recent selling. Nike dropped 2% to $61.10 in the previous session, MarketWatch reported, part of a string of declines that’s left the stock roughly 25.9% below its 52-week high. The outlet also noted similar moves in VF Corp and Under Armour over the same period. (MarketWatch)
Things kick off slowly next week, with both U.S. stock and bond markets shuttered on Monday, Feb. 16, for Presidents’ Day, according to Investopedia. Regular trading picks up again Tuesday. (Investopedia)
The focus for Nike now shifts to updates on Converse’s restructuring, along with the upcoming earnings milestone. MarketBeat currently pegs Nike’s next earnings report for March 19, after the bell, although that’s still just an estimate and the company hasn’t locked in the date. (MarketBeat)