Wall Street is treating Nike (NYSE:NKE | NKE Price Prediction) like a broken brand, but the dividend tells a different story. After a 29.55% YTD slide to $44.19, the yield has climbed to 3.58%, the richest level in years. With the Fed signaling higher-for-longer rates, I want to know whether this payout is built to last.
Dividend Snapshot
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Annual Dividend | $1.64 run-rate |
| Dividend Yield | 3.58% |
| Consecutive Years of Increases | 24 years |
| Most Recent Increase | 2.5% (November 2025) |
| Aristocrat Status | Not yet (one year away) |
Free Cash Flow Still Covers the Check
The earnings ratio looks ugly. Trailing EPS of $1.51 against a $1.62 TTM dividend gives an earnings payout above 100%. Cash flow is the better lens. In FY2025, Nike generated $3.27 billion in free cash flow against $2.30 billion in dividends paid.
| Metric | TTM Value | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Earnings Payout Ratio | Above 100% | Elevated |
| FCF Payout Ratio | 70% | Elevated but covered |
| Operating Cash Flow Coverage | 1.61x | Adequate |
A Balance Sheet That Laughs at Rate Hikes
This is where the “cash-rich” label earns its keep. Nike sits on $6.66 billion in cash against $14.09 billion of equity. Even with $22.97 billion in total liabilities, EBITDA of $3.86 billion easily services debt. A hawkish Fed barely registers here.
24 Years of Increases, and Counting
| Fiscal Year | Annual Dividend |
|---|---|
| 2025 | $1.61 |
| 2024 | $1.51 |
| 2023 | $1.39 |
| 2022 | $1.255 |
| 2021 | $1.13 |
Growth is decelerating. The last raise was just 2.5%, well below the 8%-plus bumps in 2023 and 2024. The streak is intact, but management is clearly conserving cash during the turnaround.
Management Puts Money Behind the Words
CEO Elliott Hill told investors, “NIKE is in the middle innings of our comeback”, and he backed it with personal capital. In April, Hill purchased 47,320 shares near $42.27, joined within days by directors Tim Cook and Robert Swan. CFO Matthew Friend cautioned the recovery “will not be linear”, but neither executive hedged on the payout.
The Verdict: Safe, but Growth Is Resting
Dividend Safety Rating: Safe. The FCF payout at 70% is elevated yet covered, the cash pile is fortress-grade, and 24 years of increases plus open-market CEO buying tell me this board will defend the streak. Nike screens as an income holding if the “Win Now” plan stabilizes margins in FY2027. The risk case is tariffs and Greater China weakness forcing another year of -34% net income declines. Net-net, the dividend itself looks insulated from Fed noise. The next raise will be small, but it is coming.