Marketdash

Tim Cook Drops $3 Million on Nike Stock in His First Open-Market Buy

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Apple's CEO just made his first personal Nike stock purchase after nearly 20 years on the board, joining another director in betting on the struggling athletic apparel giant's turnaround.

When a CEO who's been sitting on a board for two decades suddenly decides to spend nearly $3 million of his own money on the company's stock, people tend to notice. That's exactly what happened this week when Apple Inc.'s (AAPL) Tim Cook made his first-ever open-market purchase of Nike Inc. (NKE) shares.

Cook Doubles Down on Nike

Cook picked up 50,000 shares at an average price of $58.97 each, according to Tuesday's SEC filings. The $2.95 million transaction more than doubled his stake to 105,480 shares, now worth about $6.04 million based on Nike's Tuesday closing price of $57.34.

Here's what makes this interesting: Cook has been on Nike's board since 2005. During those 20 years, he's received stock awards totaling $179,453, but he's never before walked into the open market and bought shares with his own cash. Until now.

He's not alone, either. Robert Swan, another Nike director and former Intel Corp. (INTC) CEO, bought 8,691 shares at an average price of $57.54 on Monday. When multiple insiders start buying during a rough patch, it's usually worth paying attention. These aren't casual investments—they're executives putting real skin in the game, signaling they believe the worst may be behind them.

The Turnaround Story Takes Shape

Nike needs a turnaround. The stock has cratered 65.49% from its all-time high of $166.19 back in November 2021. That's the kind of decline that gets uncomfortable even for patient investors.

But Nike's President and CEO Elliott Hill isn't panicking. He says the company is in the "middle innings" of its comeback and believes recent actions will "drive the long-term growth and profitability" across its core brands and products. The company's "Win Now" strategy is focusing on running, North America, and wholesale—and according to Hill, it's already showing early signs of life in key categories.

Tariffs Cast A Shadow Despite Strong Earnings

Nike's recent earnings tell a complicated story. The company beat analyst expectations on both revenue and earnings in its second-quarter results last week. You'd think that would be good news, right? Instead, the stock dropped 11%.

The culprit? Tariff concerns. Investors are worried about what trade policies might do to Nike's margins and pricing power, and that anxiety overshadowed what was otherwise a solid quarter.

Wall Street responded predictably. On December 19, several major firms—including UBS, Citigroup, Barclays, Truist Securities, and Goldman Sachs—maintained their ratings but slashed their price targets. Still, the consensus price target sits at $80.25 per share, which would represent a 39.95% upside from current levels. That's a meaningful gap, suggesting analysts think the market may be overreacting to the tariff noise.

Nike shares edged up 0.21% on Tuesday to close at $57.34 and gained another 2.48% in overnight trading. But the technical picture remains challenging—the stock scores poorly on momentum, value, and quality metrics, with unfavorable price trends across short, medium, and long-term timeframes.

The question now is whether Cook's bet signals genuine confidence in Nike's turnaround or simply reflects a board member's loyalty during tough times. Either way, when someone of Cook's stature writes a $3 million check for a stock that's been beaten down this badly, it's a vote of confidence that's hard to ignore.

Tim Cook Drops $3 Million on Nike Stock in His First Open-Market Buy

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Apple's CEO just made his first personal Nike stock purchase after nearly 20 years on the board, joining another director in betting on the struggling athletic apparel giant's turnaround.

When a CEO who's been sitting on a board for two decades suddenly decides to spend nearly $3 million of his own money on the company's stock, people tend to notice. That's exactly what happened this week when Apple Inc.'s (AAPL) Tim Cook made his first-ever open-market purchase of Nike Inc. (NKE) shares.

Cook Doubles Down on Nike

Cook picked up 50,000 shares at an average price of $58.97 each, according to Tuesday's SEC filings. The $2.95 million transaction more than doubled his stake to 105,480 shares, now worth about $6.04 million based on Nike's Tuesday closing price of $57.34.

Here's what makes this interesting: Cook has been on Nike's board since 2005. During those 20 years, he's received stock awards totaling $179,453, but he's never before walked into the open market and bought shares with his own cash. Until now.

He's not alone, either. Robert Swan, another Nike director and former Intel Corp. (INTC) CEO, bought 8,691 shares at an average price of $57.54 on Monday. When multiple insiders start buying during a rough patch, it's usually worth paying attention. These aren't casual investments—they're executives putting real skin in the game, signaling they believe the worst may be behind them.

The Turnaround Story Takes Shape

Nike needs a turnaround. The stock has cratered 65.49% from its all-time high of $166.19 back in November 2021. That's the kind of decline that gets uncomfortable even for patient investors.

But Nike's President and CEO Elliott Hill isn't panicking. He says the company is in the "middle innings" of its comeback and believes recent actions will "drive the long-term growth and profitability" across its core brands and products. The company's "Win Now" strategy is focusing on running, North America, and wholesale—and according to Hill, it's already showing early signs of life in key categories.

Tariffs Cast A Shadow Despite Strong Earnings

Nike's recent earnings tell a complicated story. The company beat analyst expectations on both revenue and earnings in its second-quarter results last week. You'd think that would be good news, right? Instead, the stock dropped 11%.

The culprit? Tariff concerns. Investors are worried about what trade policies might do to Nike's margins and pricing power, and that anxiety overshadowed what was otherwise a solid quarter.

Wall Street responded predictably. On December 19, several major firms—including UBS, Citigroup, Barclays, Truist Securities, and Goldman Sachs—maintained their ratings but slashed their price targets. Still, the consensus price target sits at $80.25 per share, which would represent a 39.95% upside from current levels. That's a meaningful gap, suggesting analysts think the market may be overreacting to the tariff noise.

Nike shares edged up 0.21% on Tuesday to close at $57.34 and gained another 2.48% in overnight trading. But the technical picture remains challenging—the stock scores poorly on momentum, value, and quality metrics, with unfavorable price trends across short, medium, and long-term timeframes.

The question now is whether Cook's bet signals genuine confidence in Nike's turnaround or simply reflects a board member's loyalty during tough times. Either way, when someone of Cook's stature writes a $3 million check for a stock that's been beaten down this badly, it's a vote of confidence that's hard to ignore.