Nike (NKE) is making a habit of frustrating investors. Wall Street’s patience is being tested to no end, disappointing even the most fervent of bulls.
The sportswear giant is stuck in a quagmire. The painful stretch is thanks to slow sales, more competition, and constant questions regarding the ability of the management to bring back the momentum of one of the world’s most famous consumer brands.
That skepticism is clearly embedded within the stock. Nike shares are down roughly 25% over the past 12 months and are also down double digits so far this year, leaving many investors confused as to when to call a bottom for shares.
That is why a fresh upgrade from Barclays is grabbing eyeballs.
Barclays upgraded Nike stock to overweight and raised its price target to $73 from $64, according to CNBC, arguing the fundamental bottom is coming. The long period of deteriorating sentiment is over.
What are the reasons this shift is happening? Well, it is down to operational progress, financial improvement, and more disciplined management action, which is slowly starting to take shape.
For investors, the takeaway is straightforward. A big name on Wall Street now believes the worst is behind Nike. With another earnings report approaching, that call matters more than a run of the mill analyst upgrade.
Barclays argued that investor sentiment around Nike may have reached “peak skepticism” as the company’s financial picture appears to be nearing a bottom.
Nike stock slump has left investors looking for signs of a bottom
Nike’s problems did not start with the present quarter. Nor are they the result of a single headline.
The consumer giant is navigating a difficult period, one it has rarely faced in its history. Wholesale performance is uneven. At the same time, both legacy rivals and newer brands are gaining on it. Leadership changes have added another set of issues for investors already confused regarding the future of the company.
That backdrop has made Nike stock especially sensitive to any signal that turnaround efforts are finally gaining some steam. For months, investors have been scratching their heads as they look at weak sales trends against the company’s long-term brand strength, global reach, and history of comebacks.
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The result has been a tug-of-war between bargain hunters and skeptics, between the staunchest bulls and the most fervent of bears.
Barclays believes the markets are being too negative.
It sees recent operational progress and financial “inflections” as evidence that Nike is transforming and has exited the current slump. That does not mean the company is suddenly free of risk. However, it does suggest that someone on Wall Street believes expectations are becoming too low.
For stocks that are beaten down, a change in tone like that is much more important than the fundamentals. When investors stop worrying about things getting worse and start worrying about things getting better, their feelings can change quickly.
Barclays also said Nike’s growth in North America could start to matter more than two things that have been bad for the stock: weak trends in China and worries about tariffs.
The bank’s call, on the other hand, suggests that those risks may not be the only thing to which investors should pay attention.
Nike stock key takeaways
- Nike is expected to report fiscal third-quarter earnings on March 31.
- Barclays upgraded Nike stock to overweight.
- The bank upped its price target to $73 from $64.
- Barclays said Nike may be near a fundamental bottom.
- The firm points to operational progress, financial enhancement, and management rigor.

Nike earnings could test whether Barclays is early or right
The next major moment for Nike investors will not come in the shape of an analyst note. Instead, it will come from management.
Nike is slated to report fiscal third-quarter earnings post the market close on March 31, and that report will go a long way toward checking whether Barclays’ optimism gains traction with a broader group of investors.
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Nike needs to deliver on three fronts:
- Nike needs to show better North American trends
- There is a need for more stable margins and credible evidence that its strategic reset is gaining steam.
- The case for a bottom in the stock is gaining ground.
If the results are mixed, however, Nike skeptics will double down.
That is the challenge with turnaround stories. Before the numbers show it, analysts can point out setups that are getting better, but investors usually want proof. When it comes to Nike, that proof probably needs to show that management is getting the business back under control without making vague promises or setting far-off goals.
The stock has already been hit hard, so even small signs of stabilization could change everything.
Barclays’ new target is roughly in line with the broader Wall Street consensus, which still implies substantial upside from Nike’s recent trading level.
That alone helps explain why the upgrade is so valuable. It strengthens the notion that Nike might no longer be perceived merely as a faltering brand under duress, but rather as an injured market leader with a credible trajectory to recovery.
Right now, Barclays is making a call that a lot of investors have been afraid to make: Nike may still have problems, but the worst of the stock’s reset may already be priced in.
Nike stock timeline for investors
- Late 2024:Nike changes CEOs as pressure builds around sales and execution, according to Business Insider.
- 2025: Shares remain under pressure as competition, China weakness, and consumer concerns weigh on sentiment.
- March 11:Barclays upgraded Nike to overweight and raised its price target to $73.
- March 31:Nike is scheduled to report fiscal third-quarter earnings after the market closes.
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