Nike (NYSE:NKE) kept sliding in June 2026, and this time Wall Street put a number on the disappointment.
By Ruslan Averin.
This is Ruslan Averin's NKE stock analysis — here is how I read a downgrade that confirms what the chart already said.
The downgrade
RBC Capital Markets analyst Piral Dadhania cut Nike from Outperform to Sector Perform and slashed the 12-month price target from $70 to $50. The reason was blunt: the recovery under new CEO Elliott Hill is taking longer than the bulls underwrote. Nike is now down roughly 30% year to date and recently touched an 11-year low after earnings.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| RBC rating | Outperform → Sector Perform |
| Price target | $70 → $50 |
| 2026 to date | ~-30% |
| Since Hill appointed | ~-50% |
| Adidas over comparable stretch | ~+70% |
Why the brand is not the question
Nike is not failing because people stopped wearing Nike. It is failing on execution: inventory, direct-to-consumer missteps, a slower China recovery, and a product cycle that lost the cultural lead to competitors. The Adidas comparison is the uncomfortable part — over the same window Hill has run Nike down ~50%, Adidas ran up ~70%. That is not a sector problem; that is a company-specific gap.
How I read it
A downgrade after a 30% fall is not a catalyst — it is a confirmation. RBC is not telling the market something new; it is removing the benefit of the doubt the turnaround thesis was running on. The danger with a stock like this is the brand: it tempts you to call every leg down "the bottom" because the franchise is real. But a real brand executing badly can keep falling for years — Nike has now lost value four years running.
Bottom line: The brand is intact; the execution is not, and the Street just stopped pretending otherwise. I treat NKE as a turnaround to verify with results, not to anticipate with hope. I do not hold the shares and am not advising anyone to buy or sell.
