A 56% surge to $100 would erase two years of pain, but falling sales, shrinking margins, and a 28% EPS contraction expected in FY26 leave little room for error.
The math behind $100
Nike closed last week at $64. A run to $100 before New Year’s Eve prices in a 56% gain—the kind of move that would catapult the Swoosh back into market-leader status.
The last time investors saw triple digits was March 2024. Since then, the stock has under-cut every major moving average and is now 64% below the November 2021 all-time high of $179. Even a partial recovery to $100 would still leave shares 44% below that peak, underscoring how steep the climb really is.
Why the market refuses to pay up
Valuation tells the story. Nike’s price-to-sales ratio sits at 2×, a 43% discount to its 10-year average of 3.5×. That compression is the market’s way of saying top-line growth is gone for now.
The numbers back the pessimism. Revenue for fiscal 2025 fell 10% to $46.3 billion while net income dropped 44%. Gross margin compressed as excess inventory met promotional pricing, and SG&A deleverage amplified the hit to the bottom line.
Strategy reset under Elliott Hill
Returning executive Elliott Hill has outlined six near-term priorities: right-size the Classics portfolio, restore Nike Digital to a premium experience, diversify the product mix, deepen consumer connections, rebuild wholesale partnerships, and realign internal teams.
Those bullet points translate into three financial levers investors should watch:
- SKU rationalization to lift gross margin by 80–120 bps in FY26.
- Digital recapture of high-margin DTC traffic lost to TikTok-viral rivals.
- Wholesale re-expansion with Foot Locker and JD Sports to reclaim shelf space from On Holding and Hoka.
Consensus is braced for more pain
Wall Street expects EPS to drop 28% in FY26. That forecast embeds another revenue decline, a stronger dollar, and higher air-freight costs as Red Sea disruptions persist. In other words, the Street is not pricing in any of Hill’s fixes—setting up a potential beat if even half the plan works.
Yet the hurdle is high. To justify $100, Nike would need to trade at roughly 35× forward earnings on restored $2.85–$3.00 EPS—levels last seen when sales were growing high-single digits and margins were 46%. Today, gross margin is 43.5% and revenue is shrinking.
Three catalysts that could close the gap
- Q3-Q4 wholesale reorder surge: Early reads from SportsScan show Nike retro running styles gaining shelf share again. If reorder rates jump double digits, revenue guidance gets revised higher in June.
- China snapback: Greater China revenue fell 16% last quarter. Beijing’s stimulus and a weak comp base offer easy optics; a return to flat growth adds $700 million to the top line.
- Margins from less air freight: Every 100 bps of gross-margin recovery flows $0.20 straight to EPS. Two consecutive quarters of expansion would rerate the multiple toward 3× sales—exactly the 56% lift the bulls need.
Risk checklist before you bet on $100
- Inventories: Days sales outstanding still 15% above 2019 levels; clearance risk lingers.
- Competitive share loss: On Holding and Deckers’ Hoka grew revenue 50% and 34% last quarter, respectively.
- F/X headwind: A 4% stronger dollar versus the basket would shave $0.08 from EPS.
Positioning now: trade, don’t marry
Options markets price a ±32% move through January 2027, implying the market itself is unsure. Momentum traders can play a $70–$75 breakout on any guidance hike, while long-term investors should wait for two consecutive quarters of positive revenue and margin before paying up.
Bottom line: Nike has the brand equity and the balance-sheet firepower to spark a comeback, but until revenue turns, $100 remains a low-probability lottery ticket rather than a base case.
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