Nike (NYSE:NKE | NKE Price Prediction) reported its fiscal third quarter 2026 results after the markets closed yesterday, and the stock is paying for it. Shares are down 13.41% in morning trading today, despite a 24.25% earnings beat. CEO Elliott Hill acknowledged the turnaround is taking “longer than I would like,” and investors heard exactly that. The market isn’t buying the narrative anymore, even when the numbers technically clear the bar.
Wholesale Holds the Line While Direct Stumbles
There were genuine bright spots. Wholesale revenue rose 5% to $6.50B, showing the traditional retail channel is stabilizing. North America grew 3% to $5.03B, driven largely by that wholesale strength. Footwear, Nike’s core business, posted $7.35B, up 2% year over year. EMEA also contributed positively, rising 2% to $2.87B.
Running continues to lead the sport offense strategy. It was the first category to enter Nike’s performance-first repositioning, and it’s showing results. Management pointed to running as proof the playbook works, even if execution across the rest of the portfolio is lagging.
China, Converse, and Digital All Drag at Once
Greater China revenue fell 7% on a reported basis and 10% on a currency-neutral basis to $1.62B. That’s a persistent problem, not a one-quarter blip. With Middle East tensions pushing oil prices sharply higher (WTI recently hit $98.71 per barrel before pulling back to $89.33), elevated shipping and logistics costs add another layer of pressure on an already strained international business.
Converse is in freefall, down 35% to $264M with EBIT turning negative. Nike Direct slipped 4% to $4.50B, with digital revenues down 9%. The digital decline stems partly from pulling back on heavy promotional activity, which is the right long-term call, but it’s hurting near-term numbers. Gross margin contracted 130 basis points to 40.2%, pressured by tariff-driven cost increases in North America. That margin line will be a key indicator next quarter.
EPS Beat Masks a Messy Income Statement
Key Figures (Q3 FY2026)
- Diluted EPS: $0.35 (vs. $0.2817 expected); 4th consecutive quarter of beating estimates
- Revenue: $11.28B (vs. $11.23B expected); essentially flat year over year
- Gross Margin: 40.2%; contracted 130 bps year over year
- Net Income: $520M; down 34.51% year over year
- Operating Income: $635M; down 19.42% year over year
- Greater China Revenue: $1.62B; down 10% currency-neutral
- NIKE Direct Digital: down 9%
- Converse Revenue: $264M; down 35%
The net income decline was amplified by a normalized tax rate of 20.0% versus 5.9% in the prior year period, which inflated the year-over-year comparison. Even accounting for that, operating income falling 19.42% tells the real story of cost pressure meeting flat revenue.
Hill Signals Patience, CFO Points to More Pain Ahead
CEO Elliott Hill said, “The work is not finished, but the direction is clear, our teams are moving with focus and urgency, and our foundation is getting even stronger to build the future of NIKE.” He also noted the turnaround is taking “longer than I would like,” a candid admission that resonated poorly with investors. CFO Matthew Friend was more blunt, stating that “Win Now” restructuring actions will continue to impact results over the balance of the calendar year. That’s a warning about continued near-term disruption. Management sounded committed to the plan but honest about the timeline.
Guidance Points Down While Analysts Expected Up
Management guided for continued restructuring impacts through year-end, with no clear inflection point on the horizon. Analysts had been expecting revenue growth next quarter. Instead, they got a roadmap for more disruption. Consumer sentiment remains near recessionary levels at 56.6 on the University of Michigan index, which doesn’t help Nike’s Direct and digital channels recover. Watch how China trends evolve in Q4. If tariff pressure intensifies and consumer spending stays soft, that’s where the next leg of pain shows up.