Nike Inc. shares slipped in early trading, down about 1.4% and changing hands at $42.58 in pre-open trade, after a pair of analyst moves intensified scrutiny of the company’s turnaround timeline and the durability of its recovery.
Evercore ISI lowered its view on the stock from Outperform to In Line and cut its price target to $46 from $57. The firm highlighted what it described as ongoing wholesale channel resets, limited visible product innovation through calendar year 2027, and near-term execution issues - including delivery problems linked to the FIFA World Cup - as signs that the rebound in Nike’s business is unfolding more slowly than previously expected. Evercore also pointed to Nike’s preliminary guidance for the first half of fiscal 2027, which projects revenues to fall in the low-single digits, a pace that sits well below Street consensus.
Goldman Sachs followed with a reduction in its price target to $46 from $52 while keeping a Neutral rating, adding to analyst caution. Together, the changes reflect an analyst consensus that currently stands at 14 buys, 22 holds, and 2 sells.
The timing of the downgrades - roughly one week before Nike reports fiscal Q4 2026 results on June 30 - increases uncertainty heading into the company’s earnings release. Underlying operating trends remain a challenge: the higher-margin Nike Direct segment has been contracting, digital sales have softened, and tariff-related pressures have compressed North American gross margins for six consecutive quarters.
Market-wide risk aversion provided little relief. The NASDAQ fell about 1.3% and the S&P 500 slipped 0.4% in a risk-off session that hit consumer discretionary names particularly hard, magnifying the downward pressure on Nike’s shares.
Competitive dynamics have also drawn investor attention. Rivals including Adidas, On Holding, and Deckers Outdoor’s Hoka brand have been making inroads in performance footwear, a key category Nike is attempting to reclaim through its so-called "Win Now" strategy under CEO Elliott Hill.
Those combined forces - analyst downgrades, guidance that trails consensus, soft fundamentals in direct and digital channels, tariff headwinds, and a weak tape for growth-sensitive stocks - pushed Nike toward the bottom of its 52-week trading range of $41.35 to $80.17. The stock is trading roughly 47% below its 52-week high, underscoring the sizable gap between current sentiment and the level of confidence investors would need to see restored before sentiment can materially improve.
Upcoming catalyst: Nike’s Q4 fiscal 2026 earnings report on June 30.