Nike (NKE) has spent nearly two years trying to convince investors that it's on track to deliver a turnaround in its business.
However, this week, Evercore ISI, a closely followed Wall Street firm, said the evidence on ground indicates otherwise, InvestorsHub noted.
Nike's stock is one of the worst performers among large consumer brands in 2026, and the analyst's call gave sellers something to act on.
If you're holding Nike or simply observing its performance, the question that matters is how much downside is left before things start picking up again.
Evercore ISI downgraded Nike to "in line" from "outperform," a switch from recommending the stock to treating it as roughly average, and cut its price target to $46 from $57, according to Investing.com.
The call followed weeks of channel checks, where analysts track real sales at stores and distributors to gauge demand before a company's official earnings come out.
Analyst Michael Binetti wrote that those checks keep highlighting fresh signs of weakness in Nike.
Binetti also cut his profit estimates, trimming fiscal 2027 (FY27) earnings to $1.65 a share from $1.70, below the $1.82 Wall Street expects.
Nike shares have lost about a third of their value in 2026 as analysts question the pace of its turnaround.
JIM WATSON &sol Getty Images
Binetti's downgrade rested on three specific weak spots in Nike's business.
Together, they explain why Evercore now doubts Nike can hold the premium valuation it earned over decades.
A day after the downgrade, Nike named former Pfizer finance chief David Denton as its new chief financial officer, effective August 17, according to Investing.com.
He replaces Matt Friend, who remains through September 4, Investing.com reported.
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Evercore called the timing awkward.
A CFO arriving in mid-August would have only weeks to learn the business before management lays out a multi-year plan at Nike's investor day, which CEO Elliott Hill expects in November.
That gap increases the likelihood that Nike will trim expectations before the event, rather than risk disappointing investors on the day itself.
The picture is not all grim.
Evercore pointed to a few supports that could put a floor under Nike shares.
None of that fixes demand, though.
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Nike has told investors it expects first-half FY27 revenue to fall by a low single-digit percentage, and because Nike itself set that bar, results that come in even slightly worse can push investors to sell the stock.
Fiscal fourth-quarter results land on June 30, Yahoo Finance noted.
The split between Nike and the wider market is hard to miss.
Nike is down about 35% in 2026 and has shed more than 7% in the past five days alone, trading near $41.
Over that same stretch, the S&P 500 has climbed about 11% in 2026 and closed above 7,600 for the first time in early June, one of more than 20 record highs this year, according to data compiled by The Motley Fool.
Nike's roughly 35% slide leaves it moving in the opposite direction of nearly everything around it.
Nike's problem sits beyond a single bad quarter.
Investors now have to worry about weak U.S. demand, soft Jordan sales, late European product, and a new finance chief all at once, and Evercore thinks a formal earnings cut is likely before the company's investor day in November.
Nike is not alone. Rivals are fighting the same pullback in casual spending, and Lululemon just cut its own full-year outlook.
Patient investors are buying at a 15-year low valuation and collecting a dividend yield near 4% while they wait. However, it's not clear how long the wait will last, and the June 30 report will signal whether there's hope for a near-term turnaround.
Related: Evercore sends strong message to stock market bears


