New York, January 4, 2026, 19:09 ET — Market closed
- Nike closed down 0.7% at $63.28 on Friday, easing after a late-December bounce.
- A regulatory filing showed CEO Elliott Hill bought 16,388 Class B shares at about $61.10.
- Traders are watching U.S. jobs and inflation data this week and Nike’s next earnings on March 19.
Nike shares ended the first U.S. session of 2026 lower, trimming a late-December rebound that had been fueled by insider-buying disclosures. The stock closed down 0.7% at $63.28 on Friday. StockAnalysis
The pullback matters because investors are looking for firmer evidence that demand can stabilize without deeper discounting, after Nike’s latest quarterly report highlighted pressure in its direct-to-consumer business and weakness in Greater China. With the stock still struggling to regain footing, traders are treating near-term price action as a test of whether the recent insider votes of confidence can keep sellers at bay. SEC
Macro catalysts could set the tone for consumer stocks early in the year. The U.S. Labor Department is scheduled to publish the December jobs report on Jan. 9 and December CPI inflation data on Jan. 13, while the Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting runs Jan. 27-28. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Friday’s slip came on a mixed day for U.S. equities, with the Dow up 0.66%, the S&P 500 up 0.19% and the Nasdaq fractionally lower, MarketWatch data showed. In athletic wear, Deckers Outdoor rose 3% and Under Armour’s shares climbed more than 5%, leaving Nike lagging some peers into the weekend. Marketwatch
The late-December rally was sparked by an SEC Form 4 — a disclosure insiders file to report their stock trades — showing CEO Elliott Hill bought 16,388 shares of Nike Class B stock on Dec. 29 at a weighted-average $61.10. The filing, dated Dec. 30, showed Hill’s direct holdings rising to 241,587 shares. SEC
Technically, the stock has chopped in a tight band. Nike has traded roughly between $57 and $64 since Dec. 23, with traders watching the $60 area as a near-term floor and the $64 zone as the first clear resistance. StockAnalysis
Nike’s last earnings catalyst came on Dec. 18, when the company said second-quarter revenue rose 1% to $12.4 billion, while NIKE Direct — its direct-to-consumer channel, including stores and digital — fell 8%. Gross margin fell 300 basis points (one basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point) to 40.6%, and earnings per share, a standard profit measure, were $0.53. Nike Investors
In its quarterly filing, Nike attributed the margin contraction in part to higher product costs tied to tariffs in North America and to lower average selling prices driven by channel mix and higher discounts. The filing also showed Greater China revenue down 16% on a currency-neutral basis — stripping out foreign-exchange effects — while NIKE Brand Digital sales in the region fell 36%. SEC
But insider buying does not fix near-term execution risks. If Nike has to keep leaning on promotions to clear inventory or if China demand stays soft, investors are likely to keep pressing management on margin recovery and the path back to steadier growth.
The next company-specific checkpoint is Nike’s fiscal third-quarter earnings report, scheduled for March 19 after the close, with a consensus EPS forecast of $0.32, TipRanks data show. Tipranks