Nike Reports June 30. The Bar Is So Low It Might Actually Matter.


At roughly $41.82 as of Wednesday’s close, Nike trades at almost half its 52-week high of $80.17. Revenue is down 9.8%. Tariffs are adding $1.5 billion in costs. And China is struggling. The CEO is midway through a painful structural reset, and the CFO just announced he’s leaving in August.

And yet: among the 35 analysts covering the stock, 12 recommend a Strong Buy, and the average analyst price target is $59.70 — implying roughly 40.9% upside from current levels.

That’s not a consensus bet on a quick recovery. That’s a market that has almost given up on a near-term catalyst and is just hoping the brand survives long enough for the turnaround to land. The question is whether June 30’s earnings change any of that.

What the Numbers Say

Nike will release Q4 earnings on June 30. Analysts predict earnings of 12 cents per share and revenue of $10.85 billion. That’s the bar. It’s not high.

There’s something the consensus may be underweighting, though. Nike announced it has scheduled its fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2026 earnings announcement for Tuesday, June 30. The upcoming report is anticipated to reflect an unexpected gain due to tariff refunds, which had not been included in earlier forecasts. That refund changes the EPS math in a way the Street hasn’t fully reflected.

The company has exceeded Wall Street’s EPS estimates in all of its last four quarters. Nike’s fiscal Q3 2026 earnings came in at $0.35 per share, surpassing analyst expectations of $0.30. Revenue reached $11.3 billion, slightly above the anticipated $11.23 billion. The pattern of beating a low bar is well established. The real question isn’t whether Nike beats Q4 estimates — the question is what management says about the path forward.

Slight tangent: Nike announced that David M. Denton will join the company as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, effective August 17, replacing Matt Friend who will step down at that time. Friend will participate in the company’s fourth quarter fiscal 2026 earnings call on June 30 as planned. Denton’s first public appearance is an opportunity, not a risk.

Where the Business Actually Stands

The Win Now turnaround under CEO Elliott Hill is producing measurable, if uneven, progress. Nike Running grew over 20% in Q3 and drove double-digit growth across multiple regions. North America revenue grew 3%, with wholesale up 11% while NIKE Direct was down 5%. Sell-through improved in February and the geography delivered positive growth in all channels for the first time in two years.

China is the problem that won’t resolve quickly. Management projected Greater China revenue would fall approximately 20% in the quarter. Greater China inventory dollars declined mid-teens year-over-year and units were down more than 20%, reflecting deliberate sell-in management and marketplace cleanup. That’s painful in the near term, but it’s the right kind of pain. A clean marketplace positions the brand for a real demand recovery when sentiment shifts.

The company expects gross margin expansion beginning in Q2 fiscal 2027, as tariff mitigation and recovery from transitory Win Now impacts take effect, and expects Q4 to show sequential gross margin improvement. The tariff refund in Q4 is a preview of that relief arriving earlier than expected.

For fiscal 2026, analysts project the company’s EPS to be $1.49, down 31% from $2.16 in fiscal 2025. That’s the trough. The question earnings needs to answer is whether fiscal 2027 is the year the numbers start going the other direction.

The Options Picture and Defined-Risk Framework

Options traders heading into this report are pricing a significant post-earnings swing. NKE fell 15.51% the following session after the Q3 guidance disappointed on China. That kind of historical volatility keeps implied volatility elevated heading into every subsequent report. The options market is expecting a major move — the direction depends entirely on what management says about FY2027.

For traders who believe the tariff refund provides a positive surprise and management delivers even modestly constructive FY2027 guidance, a defined-risk bull structure using shorter-dated calls captures that scenario without the full binary risk of owning shares into the announcement. BofA indicators suggest that slower-than-expected wholesale sell-through continues to warrant caution, and analysts are watching wholesale trends closely, citing risks that prolonged weakness could lead to elevated discounting or reduced reorders. For those who hold that view, defined-risk put spreads offer downside participation if guidance disappoints again.

Bull case: the tariff refund beats, China decline comes in shallower than the 20% guide, management offers constructive FY2027 color, and the stock re-rates 20-25% toward analyst targets. Bear case: wholesale momentum stalls, China deteriorates beyond guidance, and the market loses patience with the timeline. Neutral case: Nike roughly matches guidance, delivers nothing new on the recovery, and the stock drifts sideways — which at this price and multiple is actually the least damaging outcome for patient investors.

The Longer Case for Patient Capital

Nike has maintained dividend payments for 43 consecutive years. The bull case rests on brand strength, $3.3 billion in free cash flow, and a wholesale channel reset that may finally be gaining traction. The balance sheet carries no significant debt. The brand’s global franchise — across running, basketball, football, and Jordan — is not impaired. What’s impaired is the execution layer: channel mix, China exposure, and the cost structure from prior management’s mistakes.

Nike is a structurally durable brand in the middle of a painful but deliberate reset, now trading at its lowest price since 2014. At the Q4 earnings report on June 30, watch Greater China revenue against the guided approximately 20% decline. A shallower drop signals the marketplace cleanup is tracking ahead of schedule and is the most direct catalyst for a re-rating.

The market has priced in a reset that never ends. The business is telling a different story — slowly, quarter by quarter. Five days from now, earnings gets a chance to start closing that gap. Or confirming it.

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