Nike Inc. (NKE) stock climbed Thursday as investors warmed up to signs that the athletic apparel giant might finally be finding its footing after a year of inventory struggles and sluggish sales. The optimism centers on a few key things: new products hitting the market, stronger demand signals, and a pragmatic shift toward reaching shoppers wherever they are, including budget-conscious consumers scrolling through Amazon.
Nike is set to report its second-quarter fiscal 2026 results on Thursday, December 18, and Wall Street is watching closely to see if the turnaround story holds up.
The Path Forward According to Wall Street
Bank of America Securities analyst Lorraine Hutchinson kept her Buy rating on Nike with an $84 price target, and she's zeroed in on what really matters: the third-quarter revenue guidance. That number will tell investors whether Nike's year-long effort to clean up bloated inventory and accelerate innovation is actually working.
Hutchinson thinks sales should start improving in the third quarter, helped along by wholesale deliveries ramping up, early demand tied to the World Cup, and easier year-over-year comparisons. The company is also dealing with some headwinds, though. Direct-to-consumer traffic has been weaker because Nike pulled back on promotions, and last year's heavy reliance on off-price channels will make wholesale trends look worse on paper than they might actually be.
When you balance everything out, Hutchinson expects roughly flat constant-currency growth for Q3, with things picking up in the fourth quarter. The key signal to watch? Stronger messaging around sales combined with lean inventory levels would suggest Nike is on a healthy recovery track.
The Margin Question and Tariff Troubles
Gross margin is where investors are split. Nike itself has warned that recoveries don't follow straight lines, a callback to when the company was discussing earlier sales weakness. Hutchinson is modeling slightly negative constant-currency sales in the just-reported second quarter with steady improvement from there, though she acknowledges some investors think even that might be too rosy.
There's also uncertainty around gross-margin improvements as North America comparisons get easier. Nike still faces additional tariff pressure in the second half of the year, which complicates things. Hutchinson is modeling modest margin expansion but sees room for upside if products are selling through strongly at retail.
The Amazon Play
One of the more interesting moves is Nike's expanded presence on Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN). The storefront is specifically targeting value-oriented shoppers that Nike wasn't really serving before. The assortment leans heavily toward footwear priced under $100, a sweet spot for budget-conscious consumers who want the swoosh but don't want to spend premium prices.
It's a practical acknowledgment that Nike needs to fish where the fish are, even if that means sharing shelf space with everyone else on the world's biggest online retailer.
China: Still a Work in Progress
Greater China's recovery is shaping up to be a slow grind, with pressure expected to continue through fiscal 2026. Pou Sheng's sales have stabilized since June, but digital channels remain intensely promotional with steep discounting eating into margins. Management is trying to boost sell-through with refreshed store concepts, but meaningful sales growth in the region likely won't arrive until fiscal 2027.
Nike shares were up 2.01% at $67.11 at the time of publication Thursday.




