Can Nike Limp Across the Finish Line to Dividend Aristocrat Status?

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By Trey Thoelcke Published

Quick Read

  • Nike (NKE) just delivered its latest quarterly dividend, marking 24 consecutive years of dividend increases and placing Nike within striking distance of Dividend Aristocrat status.

  • However, given the financial backdrop surrounding this payment, it demands close monitoring by income investors rather than passive confidence.

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Can Nike Limp Across the Finish Line to Dividend Aristocrat Status?

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Nike (NYSE: NKE | NKE Price Prediction) just delivered its latest quarterly dividend of $0.41 per share, paid on April 1, 2026, marking 24 consecutive years of dividend increases. That streak places Nike within striking distance of Dividend Aristocrat status, which requires 25 years of uninterrupted growth. However, the financial backdrop surrounding this payment raises questions that income investors cannot ignore.

A Yield That Tells a Story of Stock Decline

Nike’s current dividend yield is 3.7%, a figure that looks attractive on the surface, but it reflects a stock under significant pressure. Shares have fallen 32.0% year-to-date to $44.19 as of the close on April 2, 2026. That yield is meaningfully above Nike’s historical average, driven not by dividend acceleration but by a collapsing stock price. Over the past five years, Nike shares have declined 66.7%, compressing market capitalization to $65.4 billion from levels that once exceeded $200 billion.

The annual dividend run rate of $1.64 per share is the result of a modest increase from $0.40 to $0.41 per quarter, effective with the December 2025 payment. That 2.5% raise keeps the growth streak alive, but the pace of income growth is lagging the pace of earnings deterioration.

Payout Ratio: The Number That Demands Attention

The most pressing concern for dividend investors is the payout ratio. On a trailing 12-month basis, Nike’s diluted EPS of $1.52 compares to a $1.62 per share dividend, meaning the dividend currently exceeds trailing earnings. The payout ratio is elevated well above sustainable levels, a condition that has persisted across recent quarters.

In the most recent quarter ended February 28, 2026, Nike reported diluted EPS of $0.35 against a quarterly dividend of $0.410, a payout that exceeds quarterly earnings by a wide margin. The prior quarter was more balanced, with EPS of $0.53 against the same $0.410 dividend, but the deteriorating earnings trajectory makes that comfort short-lived.

At the annual level, FY2025 dividend payouts totaled $2.3 billion against free cash flow of $3.268 billion, producing an FCF coverage ratio of 1.42x, a sharp decline from 3.05x in FY2024. More concerning is that operating cash flow fell from $7.429 billion in FY2024 to $3.698 billion in FY2025. In the most recent quarter alone, operating cash flow of $430 million fell short of the $609 million dividend payout, meaning Nike funded part of its dividend from reserves or financing.

Earnings Under Structural Pressure

The financial results driving these coverage concerns reflect a company in active restructuring. Full-year FY2025 net income fell 43.53% year-over-year to $3.219 billion on revenue of $46.31 billion, itself down 9.84%. Gross margins have compressed across every recent quarter, with tariff headwinds in North America and elevated discounting cited as primary drivers. Gross margin contracted by 130 basis points year-over-year to 40.2% in the most recent quarter.

The channel picture is mixed. Wholesale revenue grew 5% year-over-year in the most recent quarter, while Nike Direct declined 4% and Converse collapsed 35%. Greater China, once a high-growth engine, declined 7% in the most recent quarter and fell as sharply as 17% in Q2 FY2026.

CEO Elliott Hill, leading the company’s “Win Now” restructuring, acknowledged the uneven recovery in the March 31, 2026, earnings call: “The pace of progress is different across the portfolio and the areas we prioritized first continue to drive momentum. 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.”

Despite the earnings pressure, Nike has beaten EPS estimates in each of the past four quarters. The most recent quarter’s $0.35 EPS beat the consensus estimate of $0.30 by 16.7%. That operational resilience, combined with $5.8 billion in cash and equivalents, provides a buffer that makes an imminent dividend cut unlikely, even if coverage ratios are strained.

The 24-Year Streak: Durable or Vulnerable?

Nike’s dividend history is genuinely impressive. The quarterly dividend has grown from $0.12 per share in 1999 to $0.41 today, a progression that survived the dot-com bust, the 2008 financial crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The company maintained and grew the dividend through each of those cycles.

The current environment presents a different kind of test. Total shareholder returns in FY2025, including $2.3 billion in dividends and $2.985 billion in buybacks, totaled $5.285 billion against free cash flow of $3.268 billion, a combination that required drawing on cash reserves or financing. The 52-week high of $80.17 against the current price near $44 illustrates how far the stock has fallen, and that price compression is itself a signal of how much investor confidence has eroded.

Analysts retain a constructive bias: 19 analysts recommend buying Nike shares, with 13 at Hold and two at Sell. Their $67.09 consensus target price is well above current levels and implies meaningful upside if the restructuring gains traction. But it also reflects expectations for earnings recovery that have not yet materialized in the income statement.

What Investors Should Watch

Three metrics will determine whether the 24-year streak extends to 25 and Dividend Aristocrat status. First, operating cash flow must stabilize. The 50% decline in OCF from FY2024 to FY2025 is the single most important driver of dividend coverage risk, and any recovery in that figure would significantly improve the sustainability picture. Second, gross margin trends matter directly. Tariff-driven compression of 130 to 440 basis points across recent quarters flows straight through to earnings and cash generation. Third, Greater China and Converse need to stabilize. These two segments represent the clearest headwinds to top-line recovery, and their trajectories will shape whether the “Win Now” strategy delivers results at the pace management expects.

Nike’s $0.41 quarterly dividend has been paid, and the streak is intact. The cash position provides near-term protection. But with a payout ratio exceeding trailing earnings, free cash flow coverage at multi-year lows, and a stock trading near decade lows, income investors are holding a dividend that demands close monitoring rather than passive confidence.

 

Photo of Trey Thoelcke
About the Author Trey Thoelcke →

Trey has been an editor and author at 24/7 Wall St. for more than a decade, where he has published thousands of articles analyzing corporate earnings, dividend stocks, short interest, insider buying, private equity, and market trends. His comprehensive coverage spans the full spectrum of financial markets, from blue-chip stalwarts to emerging growth companies.

Beyond 24/7 Wall St., Trey has created and edited financial content for Benzinga and AOL's BloggingStocks, contributing additional hundreds of articles to the investment community. He previously oversaw the 24/7 Climate Insights site, managing editorial operations and content strategy, and currently oversees and creates content for My Investing News.

Trey's editorial expertise extends across multiple publishing environments. He served as production editor at Dearborn Financial Publishing and development editor at Kaplan, where he helped shape financial education materials. Earlier in his career, he worked as a writer-producer at SVE. His freelance editing portfolio includes work for prestigious clients such as Sage Publications, Rand McNally, the Institute for Supply Management, the American Library Association, Eggplant Literary Productions, and Spiegel.

Outside of financial journalism, Trey writes fiction and has been an active member of the writing community for years, overseeing a long-running critique group and moderating workshop sessions at regional conventions. He lives with his family in an old house in the Midwest.

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