Nike Stock Nears Decade Low as West Asia Conflict, China Woes Deepen Turnaround Concerns

Nike reported adjusted earnings of $0.35 per share, beating analyst expectations of $0.31. Revenue came in at $11.3 billion, roughly flat compared to the same period last year and slightly ahead of forecasts

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Nike delivered its Q3 FY2026 earnings report that, on paper, came in ahead of what analysts had predicted. In practice, it did not matter much. The company's stock tumbled more than 8% on Tuesday, the day the results were announced. The stock slumped a further 10% to $47.35 in premarket trading on Wednesday, putting it on course to open at its lowest level in over a decade.

The market's reaction reflected a growing gap between what Nike is reporting and what investors actually need to see — not just a good quarter, but convincing evidence that the worst is behind it.

What the Numbers Actually Said

Nike reported adjusted earnings of $0.35 per share, beating analyst expectations of $0.31. Revenue came in at $11.3 billion, roughly flat compared to the same period last year and slightly ahead of forecasts, according to Yahoo Finance.

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However, once the impact of currency fluctuations was stripped out, revenue actually declined 3%, pointing to some underlying pressure in the business that the headline numbers did not fully capture.

Within the business, the picture was mixed. Nike's direct-to-consumer segment, Nike Direct, saw revenue fall 4% to $4.5 billion. On the brighter side, wholesale revenue, sales through third-party retailers, grew 5% to $6.5 billion, outperforming forecasts that had actually predicted a decline, the report added.

The core Nike brand managed modest growth, with sales rising 1% to $11 billion. But sister brand Converse was a painful weak spot, with sales collapsing 35% to $264 million, far below what analysts had anticipated.

Problems That Numbers Can't Fix

Beyond the quarterly figures, it was Nike's forward-looking commentary that rattled investors. The company warned of a sharp drop in sales in the current quarter, slower-than-expected progress on its broader turnaround, and margin pressure from higher trade-related costs, all at a time when consumers in key markets are pulling back on spending, according to Reuters.

Chief Financial Officer Matthew Friend flagged a new and specific concern, the ongoing conflict in West Asia. Friend said the unrest had already disrupted shopping behaviour across parts of Europe, West Asia, and Africa, contributing to softer footfall in stores and weaker sportswear sales across those regions.

China, meanwhile, remains a persistent headache. Revenue in Greater China fell 11% during the quarter, dragged down by a sharp 27% drop in equipment sales, along with declines in both footwear and apparel, per Yahoo Finance. Nike has been struggling to recapture its footing in the world's second-largest economy for some time now, and the latest numbers suggest that effort is still very much a work in progress.

Nike CEO Elliott Hill struck a measured but determined tone. "This quarter we took meaningful actions to improve the health and quality of our business," he said, adding, "The pace of progress is different across the portfolio and the areas we prioritised first continue to drive momentum. The work is not finished, but the direction is clear."

Nike is not facing a crisis of its own making alone. Higher tariffs, a cautious global consumer, geopolitical instability, and intense competition in China are headwinds that no sportswear brand can simply run its way out of.

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