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This Month's Featured Story Down 75% From Its High, How Much Lower Can Nike Get?By Thomas Hughes. Date Posted: 4/2/2026. 
Key Points - Nike is in a position to move lower, as results and guidance undermine investor confidence.
- Amid a market shift, Nike will struggle to reclaim lost market share.
- Valuation metrics suggest this stock has room to move lower in 2026.
- Special Report: Elon Musk already made me a "wealthy man"
Nike (NYSE: NKE) stumbled, but it's now in a turnaround that is gaining traction. Headwinds remain fierce, however, and the recovery is taking longer than expected, leaving the stock vulnerable to further declines. The primary takeaway from the fiscal Q3 2026 report is that weakness will likely persist at least another quarter—possibly longer—keeping sentiment negative and the share price under pressure. Your electric bill is up 42% since 2019, and utilities requested $31 billion in rate hikes last year alone. The culprit: AI data centers consuming power at a scale the grid was never designed to handle. The last time a bottleneck like this formed, three overlooked infrastructure stocks surged 1,700%, 1,900%, and 900% before Wall Street caught on. One analyst has identified the next candidate - earlier in the cycle, smaller, and positioned at a chokepoint that even the largest players cannot build around. See the one infrastructure stock Wall Street is about to chase Analysts continue to rate Nike with a consensus Moderate Buy and a strong Buy-side bias, but sentiment and price targets have deteriorated in 2026 and accelerated after the update. Revisions tracked by MarketBeat include downgrades, price-target cuts, or both. The trend points to a consensus rating downgrade in the coming quarter and lower price targets for the stock. The chart signals are not bullish. The stock gapped down and continued lower, and appears likely to remain under pressure in the near term. Stochastic and MACD also indicate a sell. The spike in volume suggests this could be the start of a larger downward move.  Optimism Erodes, Nike Analysts Cut Ratings and Price Targets The good news is that consensus forecasts a rebound relative to the early April lows. The bad news is that sentiment is deteriorating, and downside risk at the low end points to double-digit losses. With weakness expected next quarter, analysts are unlikely to establish a firm floor until after the next earnings release. One major hurdle is the loss of market share to companies such as On Holdings (NYSE: ONON). While Nike's revenue and earnings have softened, the company still outperforms expectations in certain areas and continues to grow in some markets. Institutional investors may provide support under Nike stock, but that remains uncertain. They were net buyers in Q1, though only marginally. If institutions begin to distribute shares, that could push the stock lower—especially since they own about 65% of the float. Short sellers add some pressure as well, but short interest remains modest, below 3% of shares. Valuation is another concern. The roughly 15% post-release decline eased valuation pressure somewhat, but at about 22x forward earnings Nike may now be fairly valued as a company facing material operational challenges. Is Nike in danger of collapse? Unlikely, but the company is navigating a significant market shift and is no longer the unchallenged leader. Competitors like On Holdings can continue to take share as they build their brands. The real risk is Nike being perceived as dated while fresher competitors gain traction. Capital returns have been a reason to own Nike, but this too carries risk. Nike is unlikely to cut or suspend its dividend, but it may slow the pace of increases and scale back share repurchases. Buybacks are ongoing but materially lower than a year ago and unlikely to expand without an improvement in fundamentals; if the turnaround stalls, buybacks could be reduced further. Weak Results and Soft Guidance Undermine Nike Stock Price Nike's fiscal Q3 revenue exceeded expectations, but that was not surprising given the low bar analysts had set. The slim outperformance was offset by tepid growth, margin contraction, and guidance that points to tougher conditions ahead. By segment, the results show both the effects of the turnaround and why performance has weakened. Wholesale, once neglected while Nike emphasized direct-to-consumer (DTC), improved by 5% as management refocused on that channel, but gains were offset by softness in DTC. Earlier emphasis on DTC had eroded wholesale strength. The key question is whether Nike can find the right balance to restore sustainable growth and margins amid intensifying competition. Guidance was the catalyst for the sell-off. Even if Q3 results were only tepid, analysts had expected Q3 to be a trough with improvement in Q4. Instead, Nike guided to roughly a 3% revenue decline at the midpoint—well below the roughly 2% gain the analyst consensus had forecasted. |
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