Overview
Piper Sandler reduced its recommendation on Nike to neutral and set a $50 price target in a note published on Friday. Analyst Anna Andreeva highlighted three central concerns: the potential saturation of the athleisure market, a marked shrinkage in the Classics business, and what the firm views as insufficient product innovation to offset those volume losses.
Market and category risks
Andreeva told investors Nike faces a timing issue in several categories, noting the company is only a quarter away from having to lap strong gains in its Running category. The analyst also expressed broader caution about the Sportswear segment, writing that athleisure appears "too saturated across the industry," with frequency metrics that she described as "peakish."
Piper Sandler quantified a significant contraction in the Classics franchise, estimating that the category will account for only 10% of sales by fiscal 2027. That marks a steep decline from a prior period when Sportswear contributed roughly 40% of Nike’s revenues. Andreeva explicitly questioned what would replace that lost volume.
Valuation and near-term outlook
On valuation, Piper Sandler believes the stock is not inexpensive following its post-earnings reset, saying it trades at 22x fiscal 2028 estimated earnings and that there is no obvious near-term catalyst. The note adds that an investor day is not expected until the second half of 2026. The firm provided a bull-to-bear valuation range spanning $55 to $35.
In addition, Piper Sandler lowered its valuation multiple assumption to 25x fiscal 2028 earnings from 28x previously, pointing to limited visibility on earnings and ongoing negative revisions to sell-side estimates.
Corporate leadership and innovation concerns
Andreeva also raised questions about Nike’s capacity to deliver fresh strategic and creative thinking at scale, observing that most appointments under the company’s new leadership team have been internal hires with long tenures at Nike.
Market reaction
Nike shares were reported down about 0.5% in premarket trading following Piper Sandler’s note.