Key Takeaways
- HSBC shifted Nike’s rating from “Buy” to “Hold” and established a $48 price target, pointing to an extended recovery timeline and anticipated revenue contraction
- Shares began trading Monday at $42.59, hovering close to the 52-week bottom of $42.36, down substantially from the $80.17 peak
- The athletic apparel giant confronts approximately $1.5 billion in additional yearly expenses stemming from US tariff policies
- HSBC projects the worldwide athletic wear sector will expand roughly 3.9% during 2026, while Nike cedes territory to competitors including Adidas, On, and Arc’teryx
- A pair of Nike board members acquired shares during early April, with Robert Holmes Swan purchasing 11,781 shares valued near $500,000
Nike’s share price has descended to territory unseen for more than ten years, prompting Wall Street analysts to recalibrate their outlook.
On April 13, HSBC moved NKE from “Buy” to “Hold” status, establishing a $48 price objective. This target suggests approximately 12.7% potential appreciation from current trading levels — a relatively modest forecast.
The investment bank’s assessment was direct. Nike’s transformation strategy is progressing more slowly than anticipated. Analysts expect revenue to contract in upcoming periods, while earnings projections have faced reductions. Meanwhile, expense challenges continue mounting.
Monday’s opening price of $42.59 positioned NKE marginally above its annual floor of $42.36. The company has surrendered roughly half its valuation from the 52-week peak of $80.17. Current market capitalization hovers around $63 billion.
Multiple firms have revised their outlook alongside HSBC. Citigroup reduced its price objective from $65 down to $53. Piper Sandler made adjustments from $60 to $50. Evercore ISI moved from $69 to $57 while maintaining its “outperform” stance. Guggenheim shifted from $77 to $74 but preserved its “buy” recommendation. The aggregated view among 36 covering analysts now registers as “Hold,” with a mean price target of $62.34.
Tariff Concerns Mounting
Among the significant challenges facing the stock are tariff-related expenses. HSBC calculates Nike will absorb $1.5 billion in incremental yearly costs tied to US tariff implementations. Adidas projects a €200 million impact for 2026. Given Nike’s substantial offshore manufacturing footprint, near-term mitigation options remain limited.
HSBC’s comprehensive sector analysis highlighted heightened promotional activity throughout Western territories as Nike addresses inventory surplus situations. China presents compounded challenges — subdued economic conditions paired with intensifying domestic brand competition are eroding the company’s position.
Global athletic footwear and apparel markets are forecast to advance approximately 3.9% throughout 2026, with Asia-Pacific territories driving expansion. HSBC anticipates Nike will surrender market position to established rivals like Adidas alongside emerging brands On and Arc’teryx.
Nike’s third-quarter financial results, published March 31, marginally exceeded expectations. Earnings per share registered $0.35 compared to the consensus estimate of $0.29. Revenue reached $11.28 billion, edging past the $11.23 billion projection. Year-over-year revenue growth measured just 0.1%. For comparison, the corresponding quarter in the prior year generated $0.54 in earnings per share.
Director Purchases Signal Confidence
Some stakeholders view current valuations favorably. Two Nike board members acquired shares during early April. Robert Holmes Swan secured 11,781 units at a $42.44 price point, representing an aggregate investment approaching $500,000. This transaction expanded his ownership stake by 27.2%. Director John W. Rogers Jr. purchased 4,000 units at $43.34, totaling $173,360 and increasing his position by 10.8%.
Institutional investors control 64.25% of outstanding shares. Brighton Jones LLC expanded its holdings by 388.5% during the fourth quarter of last year, accumulating more than 160,000 additional units.
Wall Street forecasters currently anticipate Nike will deliver full-year earnings per share of $2.05 for the ongoing fiscal period. The price-to-earnings multiple stands at 28.21. The 50-day simple moving average rests at $56.46, while the 200-day moving average sits at $62.07 — both considerably above present trading levels.

