Nike’s turnaround is clearly underway, but the path back to sustained profitable growth will be gradual. The company posted Q1 FY26 revenue of $11.7 billion (+1% YoY) and EPS of $0.49, slightly ahead of expectations. However, gross margin fell 320 bps YoY to 42.2%, reflecting a mix of heavier promotions, tariffs, and channel normalization. Management’s message was unambiguous: progress is happening, but the headwinds are significant.
Nike’s turnaround is underway, but it’s a multi-year journey. With wholesale gaining traction, inventories normalizing, and performance franchises stabilizing, the direction of travel is constructive. Yet tariffs, D2C de-growth, and a struggling China business mean investors should expect non-linear quarters. This reset is less about chasing near-term growth and more about restoring the foundations for a healthier, more profitable Nike in the years ahead.
Financial Snapshot (Q1 FY26)

Tariffs and the Cost Overhang
The biggest incremental challenge comes from trade policy. Nike quantified the latest Trump tariffs as a $1.5 billion annualized gross cost burden, equivalent to roughly 120 bps of gross margin headwind this fiscal year. These tariffs primarily impact Vietnam-sourced footwear, where Nike has major production capacity. While some mitigation will come through pricing and supply-chain flexibility, the headwind is large enough to keep profitability subdued near term.
Wholesale Rebuild Is Working
One of the clearest positives from the quarter is the success of Nike’s wholesale re-engagement strategy. After years of pulling back, Nike has re-established distribution with Amazon and Dick’s Sporting Goods, while also improving the product mix offered to other strategic partners. Wholesale revenue grew 7% YoY to $6.8 billion, outpacing Direct-to-Consumer, and management emphasized that orders are building again with a “less promotional marketplace” as aged inventory clears.
D2C Reality Check
By contrast, NIKE Direct revenue fell 4% to $4.5 billion, with Digital down 12%. Management was candid that the post-COVID period of extraordinary full-price sell-through was unsustainable. In today’s normalized environment, consumers have become more price sensitive, forcing Nike into heavier promotions. That, in turn, weighed on margins. CFO Matt Friend was explicit: “We don’t expect NIKE Direct to return to growth in fiscal 2026.” Fixing this channel will require patience, as Nike pulls back on promotions to retrain consumers to buy at full price. This means near-term de-growth, but healthier margins longer term.
Inventory & Marketplace Cleanup
Inventories declined 2% YoY to $8.1 billion, a sign that progress is being made in working through aged stock. North America in particular saw unit reductions and fewer closeouts. Still, management admitted there is more stale inventory in the channel that must be cleared, which will remain a drag on gross margin in coming quarters.
Regional Picture: Strength vs. Weakness
Regionally, the results were uneven.
- North America: Revenue +4% YoY, with cleaner assortments and running/training franchises driving improvement.
- EMEA: +1%, benefiting from wholesale partner momentum.
- Greater China: -10% YoY, reflecting ongoing consumer caution and competitive intensity. Management stressed that re-engagement here will be a multi-quarter effort, with no quick fix in sight.
Outlook & Management Tone
Looking ahead, Nike guided for Q2 revenue down low-single digits and gross margin down 300–375 bps, as tariffs and D2C reset weigh on results. Wholesale is expected to post modest growth through FY26, while Direct is not expected to return to growth this year. The playbook is clear: lean into wholesale, clean up inventories, rebuild brand heat through sport franchises, and accept near-term pain in Direct to restore long-term pricing power.