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Nike’s Plunging Sales Reveal the Difficult Task Ahead for Incoming CEO

Sales missed expectations and the company withdrew its guidance, laying bare the challenges facing Elliott Hill as he prepares to lead the brand.
Nike reported a 10 percent drop in sales in its most recent quarter.
Nike reported a 10 percent drop in sales in its most recent quarter. (Justin Sullivan)

Nike’s surprise announcement last month that Elliott Hill would return to lead the company touched off a wave of jubilation and relief among employees and investors alike, who saw in the 30-year veteran a chance to return the brand to its glory days.

Tuesday’s financial results laid bare the extent of the task ahead of him.

The company recorded revenues of $11.6 billion in the quarter ended in August, down 10 percent from the same period the year before and just shy of the consensus Wall Street estimate. Net income also fell 28 percent, to $1.1 billion.

Hill, who retired from Nike in 2020, doesn’t officially return to the sportswear giant until Oct. 14, and outgoing CEO John Donahoe, who has shouldered much of the blame for the company’s recent string of dismal quarters, did not make an appearance on a call with investors and analysts tied to the quarterly results. Also Tuesday, Nike confirmed its investor day planned for November, the brand’s first in several years, would be postponed. It also withdrew its full-year guidance, choosing instead to provide quarterly guidance – another eight to 10 percent sales decline forecasted – to give Hill flexibility while he sculpts his turnaround plan.

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It was abundantly clear in Tuesday’s results that it will take more than a new CEO to fix Nike. The brand has deep-rooted problems which will require significant, company-wide change to resolve. Number one is the much-discussed innovation issue: Nike simply isn’t releasing footwear — performance or casual — which is exciting consumers, and hasn’t done so for a long time. Newer releases, including the Air Max DN and Pegasus 41, are not selling well, noted BMO analyst Simeon Siegel in a research note last week.

There will be no quick fix for this. Bernstein analysis last month forecast that Nike’s innovation pipeline issues will exist until the first half of 2026, at the earliest. The brand’s stock fell more than 6 percent in aftermarket trading after Tuesday’s earnings, erasing most of the gains seen since Hill’s appointment was announced.

“A comeback at this scale takes time. While there are some early wins, we are yet to turn a corner,” chief financial officer Matthew Friend told investors on Tuesday’s earnings call. Friend said revenue was impacted by lower-than-anticipated unit sales overall and lower sales of oversupplied retro franchises that have carried the brand in recent years, such as the Jordan 1, Dunk and Air Force 1, which Nike is quietly removing from circulation.

It’s not all doom and gloom. In recent months, Nike had begun to address some core issues.

Hill’s appointment itself was part of a wider initiative to restore Nike veterans across the company’s management, scores of whom left around the time of Donahoe’s appointment in 2020.

Nicole Hubbard Graham, who left the brand in 2021 after 17 years, returned as chief marketing officer in January this year in a move that has already yielded a distinct tone shift in the brand’s messaging — another area in which the company had lost its touch. Tom Peddie, who retired in 2020, recently returned as vice president of marketplace partners to rebuild relationships with retailers. So too, did veteran sneaker designer Frank Cooker, who announced his comeback in September after leaving the Swoosh in 2018.

These moves have served to placate Nike’s critics and brand partners alike, with many reassured the brand increasingly has the right people with the requisite institutional knowledge to transform its fortunes.

Hill is in a position akin to the one Adidas CEO Bjørn Gulden found himself in when he was parachuted to save the brand in crisis in January 2023 following the implosion of its Yeezy deal. Like Gulden with Adidas, Hill played no part in the last three years of Nike’s downturn and is untainted by those associations.

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Hill does have the benefit of being able to reset expectations at rock bottom, thereby taking off the pressure his predecessor faced from investors to enact an immediate turnaround. He won’t have the luxury of leaning into classic styles from the brand’s archive to revive interest from consumers as Gulden did. Under Donahoe, Nike was hampered by its over-reliance on retro basketball models like Jordan 1s and Air Force 1s.

Tuesday’s bleak earnings and removal of its 2025 fiscal year guidance could work in Hill’s favour, buying him more time, analysts said.

“[It’s] not necessarily a negative catalyst. With a new CEO coming, the pressure is off Q1 results,” Bernstein analysts said in a note to clients.

Further Reading

How Adidas Engineered Its Big Comeback

Two years ago, Adidas was in crisis after terminating its Yeezy business. But since then, the brand has engineered a remarkable turnaround, led by CEO Bjørn Gulden and the success of its Samba sneakers. Gulden and other Adidas executives opened up about the changes that got the company back on track, and what’s next for the sneaker giant.

About the author
Daniel-Yaw  Miller
Daniel-Yaw Miller

Daniel-Yaw Miller is Sports Correspondent at The Business of Fashion. He is based in London and covers the intersection of sports and fashion, as well the sportswear and sneaker markets.

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