Mirror Review
April 01, 2026
NIKE, Inc. recently reported its fiscal Nike Q3 2026 financial results, showing flat revenues of $11.3 billion.
While the company beat analyst expectations for both revenue and earnings per share, its net income dropped 35% to $520 million.
This report explores how the “Win Now” recovery plan is performing and why investors remain cautious about the brand’s near-term future.
Core Financial Highlights for Nike Q3 Results 2026
Despite meeting specific Wall Street targets, the NIKE earnings 2026 report highlighted several areas of financial pressure.
The decline in profit was largely driven by a dip in gross margins and increased overhead costs.
| Financial Metric | Q3 2026 Result | Year-over-Year Change |
| Total Revenue | $11.3 Billion | Flat (0%) |
| Net Income | $0.5 Billion | Down 35% |
| Diluted EPS | $0.35 | Down 35% |
| Gross Margin | 40.2% | Down 130 bps |
| Wholesale Revenue | $6.5 Billion | Up 5% |
| NIKE Direct Revenue | $4.5 Billion | Down 4% |
Understanding the “Win Now” Strategy and Nike Results
Nike CEO Elliott Hill is leading a massive turnaround effort known as the “Win Now” strategy.
This plan moves the company away from organizing by gender or age and puts sports
(specifically, performance categories like running) back at the center of the business.
On the Nike earnings call, CEO Elliott Hill admitted that the comeback is taking longer than he would like. He noted that while prioritized areas like running are gaining momentum, other segments like sportswear and the Converse brand are still in the early stages of recovery.
“The pace of progress is different across the portfolio and the areas we prioritized first continue to drive momentum,” said Elliott Hill, President and CEO of NIKE, Inc.
Regional Performance and the China Slowdown
The Nike results showed a sharp contrast between geographic markets. North America remains a bright spot, but struggles in Greater China continue to weigh down the global balance sheet.
- North America: Revenue grew 3% to $5.03 billion, supported by a strong order book for the summer season.
- Greater China: Revenue fell 7% to $1.62 billion. Executives expect a further 20% decline in China during the current quarter.
- EMEA: Experienced revenue declines, further impacted by softening traffic patterns and heavy promotions.
- Converse: This segment struggled significantly, with revenue dropping 35% to $264 million due to declines across all territories.
To address these shifts, Nike announced major leadership changes in January 2026. César Garcia took over as VP/GM of EMEA, while Cathy Sparks moved into the lead role for Greater China to help rebuild momentum in that critical market.
Why the Nike Stock Dropped After the Quarterly Report
Following the announcement of the Nike Q3 results, NKE stock fell more than 8% in extended trading. Investors were spooked by a weak outlook for the remainder of the year rather than the Q3 performance itself.
Several factors are contributing to this investor unease:
- Weak Sales Outlook: Nike expects fourth-quarter sales to drop between 2% and 4%, missing previous analyst estimates of growth.
- Tariff Pressures: Higher tariffs in North America have hurt gross margins and increased product costs.
- Digital Declines: Nike Brand Digital revenue fell 9%, partly because the company used high markdowns and promotions to move inventory.
- Geopolitical Risks: CFO Matthew Friend warned that conflict in the Middle East and rising oil prices could lead to “unplanned volatility” in consumer behavior and input costs.
Future Outlook and Inventory Management
Despite the immediate hurdles, Nike leadership remains focused on long-term profitable growth. The company expects to finish most of its “Win Now” actions by the end of the 2026 calendar year.
Inventory levels are currently at $7.5 billion, down 1% from the previous year. However, the company anticipates ending the fiscal year with elevated inventory in some regions due to slow sportswear sales and disruptions in the Middle East.
CFO Matthew Friend noted that higher tariffs are expected to ease after the first quarter of fiscal 2027, which may provide some margin relief in the future.
End Note
The Nike Earnings for the third quarter of 2026 reveal a brand in the middle of a difficult transition.
While the “Win Now” strategy is successfully revitalizing the performance running category, the broader slowdown in China and the decline in digital sales present significant obstacles.
With Nike stock feeling the pressure of a lowered sales forecast, the company must now prove that its leadership changes and focus on “Sport Offense” can deliver the sustainable growth investors are looking for.
Maria Isabel Rodrigues














