Live: Will Nike Crush Q4 Earnings and Continue Their Turnaround Tonight?
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Quick Read
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Nike (NKE) trades near a 52-week low of $40, down 34% year-to-date, making tonight's fiscal Q4 report a critical turnaround test.
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Elliott Hill and three directors bought shares at $42 in April, yet Nike has averaged a 4% stock drop after 18 straight quarterly EPS beats.
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Live Updates
Nike's Q1 Wholesale Growth Helped Offset Weak Direct Sales
Nike’s revenue trends showed a business still navigating a challenging consumer environment, with some encouraging pockets of strength. Fourth-quarter revenue totaled $11.0 billion, down 1% from a year ago, as continued weakness in Greater China and EMEA weighed on overall results.
Underneath the surface, however, the sales mix tells a more nuanced story. Wholesale revenue increased 4% to $6.6 billion, driven primarily by growth in North America, while Nike Direct revenue declined 7% to $4.1 billion.
Management said Nike Brand Digital sales fell 12%, while revenue from Nike-owned stores decreased 7%, reflecting continued pressure across its direct-to-consumer business.
Overall, Nike Brand revenue slipped just 0.4% year over year, suggesting the company’s core product portfolio is beginning to stabilize even as certain regions remain under pressure.
Investors will likely be watching upcoming quarters to see whether wholesale momentum continues and whether digital sales can return to growth as Nike’s turnaround progresses.
Tariff Recovery Fueled Nike's Huge Q1 Margin Improvement
While investors will naturally focus on Nike’s earnings beat, the biggest driver of the quarter was a dramatic improvement in profitability. Gross margin jumped 890 basis points to 49.2%, with the company attributing most of the increase to the expected recovery of International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs.
According to Nike, the tariff recovery contributed roughly 900 basis points of gross margin benefit during the quarter and added approximately $0.52 per diluted share to earnings.
That helps explain why EPS came in at $0.72, crushing Wall Street’s $0.12 expectation despite revenue remaining under pressure.
Investors will now be listening closely on the conference call to determine how much of this margin improvement represents a one-time benefit versus a more durable improvement in Nike’s earnings power. If margins remain elevated even as sales recover, it could meaningfully improve the company’s profitability heading into fiscal 2027.
Nike Q4 Earnings Are Out - Stock Up 2% After Earnings Blowout
Nike just reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings, with shares initially up 2% in after-hours trading. Here are the key numbers:
Key Results
- Revenue: $10.97 billion vs. $10.84 billion expected
- EPS: $0.72 vs. $0.12 expected
- Gross Margin: 49.2% vs. 40.3% a year ago
- Inventory: $7.50 billion, up 0.2% year over year
- Nike Brand Revenue: $10.72 billion, down 0.4% year over year
- Greater China EBIT: $243 million, down 20% year over year
Quick Read
Nike delivered a solid beat on both revenue and earnings, while gross margin improved sharply year over year. Investors will now focus on fiscal 2027 guidance and management’s commentary on demand trends, particularly in China and North America.
4 Wild Cards That Aren't Being Factored Into Nike's Consensus Estimates
Beyond the bull/bear setup, four wildcards aren’t fully reflected in the $0.11 consensus.
Four Wild Cards Hiding in Tonight’s Report
- KeyCorp’s eleventh-hour cut: At 12:13 PM ET today, KeyCorp slashed its Q4 estimate from $0.29 to $0.12, resetting the bar hours before the release.
- CFO transition: Matthew Friend is stepping down, with former Pfizer CFO David M. Denton taking over. Expect commentary on capital allocation and guidance philosophy.
- Tax rate normalization: The effective tax rate jumped to 20.0% from 5.9%, a swing that could cut either way on EPS.
- Dow removal risk: Nike is reportedly on “thin ice” for index removal, an overhang amplifying any soft commentary.
With shares at $41.10, sentiment is fragile.
Nike's Valuation Looks Cheap If Growth Returns
After falling from roughly $180 at its 2021 peak to around the $40 range, Nike stock now trades at about 22x forward earnings and is approaching 1x trailing sales, a valuation the company hasn’t seen since the depths of the 2008-09 financial crisis.
The question is whether the business can grow into that valuation. Analysts currently expect 22% EPS growth in fiscal 2027, even though revenue is projected to be essentially flat.
If management can show investors that North America is stabilizing, China is improving, and revenue growth is finally returning, the market may begin to price Nike as a recovery story rather than a company still searching for a bottom.
Revenue Growth Is the Missing Piece for Nike Heading into FY 2027
Nike’s turnaround ultimately comes down to driving revenue growth again.
The company has posted year-over-year revenue declines in six of its last nine quarters, while analysts currently expect another 2% sales decline this quarter.
Investors have shown they’re willing to look past near-term margin pressure, but they need evidence that demand is stabilizing.
For a brand as mature as Nike, sustained revenue growth is likely the clearest signal that the business has turned the corner and will be top of mind among investors tonight.
Nike's Bull vs Bear Case Ahead of Tonight's Q4 Earnings
With Nike (NYSE:NKE | NKE Price Prediction) reporting after the close, prediction markets price a 90% probability of beating the $0.12 EPS consensus. Here’s how each side frames it.
Bull Case
- Beat streak: Four consecutive EPS beats, with Q3 surprising by 24.25%.
- Insider conviction: CEO Hill bought 47,320 shares near $42.26 in April, alongside directors Cook, Rogers, and Swan.
- Wholesale and North America momentum: North America wholesale grew 11%; Running rose over 20%.
Bear Case
- Profitability eroding: Q3 net income fell 34.51%; gross margin compressed 130 bps.
- China guidance: CFO Friend guided Q4 China down approximately 20%.
- Sell-the-news pattern: Shares are down 33.87% YTD, with average 1-week post-earnings change of -3.71%.
- Converse collapse: -35% YoY, EBIT now a loss.
Analysts Top 5 Questions Ahead of Nike's Q4 Earnings Tonight
With Nike (NYSE:NKE) reporting after the close, here is what to listen for on the call.
Top 5 Analyst Questions
- Are Win Now actions still on track to finish by calendar year-end?
- Is Greater China stabilizing after the 10% currency-neutral Q3 decline?
- When does gross margin inflect in Q2 FY2027?
- What stops the Converse bleed after the -35% Q3 drop?
- Can Nike Direct/Digital return to growth?
Key Topics & Buzzwords
- Listen for: “Sport Offense,” “integrated marketplace,” sell-through, NIKE MIND traction.
Red Flags
- EMEA inventory still elevated, withdrawn FY27 guidance, or tariff impact exceeding the guided 250 basis points.
- With shares -33.87% YTD, tone matters as much as the numbers.
Q4 Is A Make-or-Break Quarter Before Investor Day
Nike has already laid out much of its turnaround strategy, making tonight’s earnings report an important bridge to the company’s fall Investor Day.
CEO Elliott Hill recently said the company’s “Win Now” initiatives remain on track to be substantially completed by year-end, with full long-term financial guidance expected this fall.
While analysts expect Nike to earn just $0.11 per share, the bigger key questions for the business are whether gross margins continue to recover, whether sales trends in China show signs of stabilizing, and whether management strikes a confident tone about the pace of the turnaround.
CEO Hill’s recent open-market stock purchase has also raised expectations that leadership believes the business is approaching an inflection point. If Nike can pair solid execution with a constructive outlook, investor sentiment could finally begin catching up with the company’s improving operating fundamentals.
Investors are watching Nike (NYSE:NKE) ahead of fiscal Q4 2026 results due at 4:15 PM ET after the market closes today. With shares down 33.87% year-to-date, this report has to give Nike’s turnaround story a pulse and could offer promising guidance for fiscal 2027.
The Comeback Hits Its Toughest Test
CEO Elliott Hill called fiscal 2026 the “middle innings” of Nike’s comeback, and the last report showed why. Q3 revenue was flat on a reported basis, EPS of $0.35 beat the $0.28 consensus, and gross margin declined 130 basis points to 40.2% on a 300 basis point tariff hit in North America.
Since then, shares are down 9.47% over the past month and trade near a 52-week low of $40.00, well below the 200-day moving average of $57.94. Despite the decline, CEO Elliot Hill bought 47,320 shares on April 13 at roughly $42.27, joined by directors Tim Cook, John Rogers, and Bob Swan.
Consensus Estimates
| Metric | Q4 FY26 Estimate | Prior Year |
|---|---|---|
| EPS | $0.11 | $0.14 |
| Revenue trajectory (company guide) | Down 2% to 4% | — |
| FY26 EPS (TTM) | $1.52 diluted | |
| FY26 Revenue (TTM) | $46.52B | |
Tariffs, China, and the FY27 Setup
Tonight, I’ll be watching three things. First, gross margin. CFO Matthew Friend guided Q4 margin down 25 to 75 basis points, including 250 basis points of tariff drag. He flagged Q2 fiscal 2027 as the last quarter of material tariff headwinds, so any commentary that tightens that timeline matters.
Second, Greater China. Friend told the Street to expect the region down approximately 20% in Q4 as Nike intentionally pulls sell-in to clean the marketplace. Q3 China revenue was down 10% with inventory down mid-teens. Investors will want to hear that profitability is bottoming out even as revenue continues to fall.
Third, North America momentum. Wholesale grew 11% in Q3 while Direct fell. Hill said the region saw positive growth in all channels for the first time in two years. Running was up over 20%. If those trends extend, the “Win Now” framework looks real.
Prediction markets price a 92% probability of an EPS beat, which would be the eighth quarter in a row. The harder question is the stock’s reaction. Nike has averaged a -3.71% one-week move after results.
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Thomas Richmond is a financial writer and content strategist with 5+ years of experience covering stocks and financial markets. He has published over 250 articles focused on individual stock analysis, helping investors better understand business fundamentals, stock valuations, and long-term opportunities.
Thomas previously served as a Content Lead at TIKR, a stock research platform, where he helped scale the company’s blog to hundreds of articles per month and contributed to a weekly newsletter reaching more than 100,000 investors.
He specializes in breaking down complex companies into clear, actionable insights for everyday investors, with a focus on fundamentals-driven research.
His work has also been featured on platforms including Seeking Alpha and Sure Dividend.
Outside of work, Thomas enjoys weight lifting and soccer.
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