• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Nike Has Lost Some Mojo. But Not Its Market Share

  • Nike’s global market share (for sneakers and apparel) dropped to 16.4% in 2024 from 17.1% in 2022.
  • The brand still “has no parallel” in size and scope.
Nike
Nike

Judging by its fiscal fourth-quarter and first-quarter results, the biggest sports brand in the world has much to fix. Shares are down 25% year to date. It’s lacking in compelling new products, too busy whittling down its glut of unsold Air Force 1s and Air Jordans. 

“Nike sucks right now,” WearTesters told their 880,000 YouTube subscribers. Nike “ran off course,” Business of Fashion wrote. The Drum pinpointed Nike’s “dwindling cultural equity.” 

To read these headlines, you’d think the once-iconic brand is headed to the grave.

Hardly.

Nike is bruised, but still owns an undeniably dominant slice of the sportswear market globally, as well as in most of the key individual markets, says David Swartz, retail analyst at Morningstar. The brand, he says, is “going through a tough period now, but I anticipate that it will come back strong. It still has all the advantages in terms of exposure, awareness, marketing, product development, and distribution.” 

Certainly some challenger sportswear and sneaker brands—Hoka, On—have caught fire and seen rapid success recently. But the industry is big enough for multiple successful companies, Swartz says. The sportswear market is not winner takes all. And Nike isn’t going anywhere. 

The company’s recent litany of problems has been well documented but bears repeating. 

First, during the COVID-19 pandemic Nike decided to pull back on its new product pipeline. That meant it leaned hard on perennial top sellers, essentially flooding the marketplace with the Dunk, Air Jordan 1, and Air Force 1 models. After a couple of years, those weren’t selling out as quickly as they had. 

Second, in another pandemic overcorrection, Nike took its products out of many of its trusty brick-and-mortar retailers and “naively believed they would recapture all that business on Nike.com,” says Matt Powell, senior advisor with BCE Consulting. The company sold fewer products, which “forced them to be more promotional on their website,” Powell says, adding that discounting isn’t healthy for a brand known to be aspirational. 

When customers constantly see a brand’s products marked down, it cheapens the image.

Third, Nike went through multiple aggressive staff reductions this year under previous CEO John Donahoe and lost many years of institutional knowledge. That has landed “some inexperienced people in positions of power who are not necessarily making the right decisions,” says Powell.

In June the Beaverton, Ore., sportswear giant reported a 1.7% decline in revenue for its fiscal fourth-quarter 2024, said its full-year outlook would miss expectations, and warned of a 10% sales decline for its first quarter; on Oct. 1 it reported the anticipated 10% drop for the quarter that encompassed July through September and withdrew its guidance entirely for the year. 

With all those problems, Nike’s global market share (for sneakers and apparel) has dropped less than one percentage point, from 17.1% in 2022 to 16.4% in 2024, according to Euromonitor data. Its closest competitor, Adidas, holds a 9% market share (down from 9.5% in 2022, but up slightly from 2023). 

After that, it’s Chinese sportswear brand Anta with a 3.7% market share, and Puma with 3%. 

chart visualization

Nike’s size and budget are key to its long-term competitive advantage. “The brand has no parallel in history when it comes to North America size/scope,” BMO Capital Markets analysts wrote in an Oct. 7 note. “With a leading ad budget fueling industry-leading dollar growth, we expect ongoing gains.” The investment bank rates Nike an Outperform. (Wall Street analysts are, for the most part, neutral to positive on the stock.)

“I don’t think Nike gives up the No. 1 spot, but it wouldn’t surprise me if they have a smaller share in the U.S.,” Powell says. “They already have a smaller share than they had five years ago.” The distance between Nike and its competitors is still vast enough for now that it can stand to lose a percentage point of market share.

The ‘Cool Factor’ 

Many Nike onlookers have blamed Donahoe, shown the door last month, for letting the retailer lose some of the cultural relevance it once had in spades. Regardless of how much of that can be put on one executive, “cool factor” is an elusive badge that can be hard to win back once it fades.

“Nike isn’t going anywhere, but when you compare Nike to how it was from around 2000 to 2010, that was a really innovative period for the brand,” says Mike D. Sykes, who writes “The Kicks You Wear,” a sneaker newsletter. “The basketball shoe was booming, it was the start of LeBron James’s career, the end of Michael Jordan’s.” 

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Part of the problem for Nike now, Sykes says, is that it has strayed from putting athletes at the center of the brand’s story. From around 2015 until today, the brand has partnered mostly with so-called “macro influencers” like rapper Travis Scott and fashion designer Virgil Abloh. Around the same time, Adidas went big on its partnership with Ye (formerly Kanye West). 

“I think that stuff still works; it still has a place,” says Sykes. “But I think it’s important for Nike as a brand to rediscover its identity in athletic gear—its core identity.”

For any consumer-facing brand to be considered cool, it has to own the teenage demographic. And here, too, the dynamic reflects how the larger market looks despite Nike’s recent fumbles. According to investment bank Piper Sandler’s semiannual teen survey, which asks teenagers about their consumption habits, Nike remains the No. 1 brand for all teens in both apparel (34% share) and footwear (59% share).

Nike’s “mindshare” with teens fell year over year, but to illustrate the gap between Nike and others, consider that Adidas is the No. 2 footwear brand with just a 7% share.

Nike and Adidas have been the No. 1 and No. 2 for years, but don’t look now: The footwear brand that gained the most mindshare with teens in this year’s survey was 114-year-old Boston brand New Balance.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Mar 29, 2026; Washington, DC, USA; UConn Huskies guard Braylon Mullins (24) celebrates after making the game-winning three-point basket against the Duke Blue Devils in the second half during an Elite Eight game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena

Braylon Mullins Waiting to Cash In On Game-Winning Shot

Mullins is holding off on NIL opportunities until the Huskies’ season ends.
Oct 4, 2025; Spokane, WA, USA; ESPN college basketball analyst Sean Farnham emcees during Numerica Kraziness in the Kennel at the McCarthey Athletic Center

ESPN Making Wooden Award Ceremony More Like Heisman

This year’s award winner will be revealed live in Los Angeles.
Mar 30, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) looks on during the second half against the Dallas Mavericks at the American Airlines Center.

Cunningham, Edwards Out of NBA Season Awards Due to 65-Game Rule

Luka Dončić was injured Thursday after playing his 64th game.
Apr 2, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; UCLA Bruins head coach Cori Close during practice prior to a 2026 NCAA Final Four women's basketball semifinal at Mortgage Matchup Center

Future of WNBA Draft Eligibility Rules Looms at Final Four

Not everyone is jumping to usher in a new era of eligibility.

Featured Today

‘The Sonics Never Died’: The Long Afterlife of Seattle NBA Merch

Inside “the largest team shop for a team that doesn’t exist.” 
Mar 27, 2026; Washington, DC, USA;UConn Huskies forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) dunks the ball against the Michigan State Spartans in the second half during a Sweet Sixteen game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena
March 28, 2026

March Madness Coaches Debate ‘Blueblood’ in NIL Era

The term’s meaning was up for debate at men’s March Madness.
Maxime Vachier Lagrave
March 25, 2026

The Planet’s Best Chess Players Are Having Their LIV Golf Moment

Chess’s most prestigious tournament is battling a splashy Saudi event.
Beau Brune/LSU
March 22, 2026

College Athletic Departments Are Becoming Media Companies

“There’s only so many tickets you can sell, but content is infinite.”
Apr 10, 2025; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Jason Day plays his shot from the fifth tee during the first round of the Masters Tournament

How Golf Apparel Companies Pull Off Unauthorized Masters Merch

The Masters doesn’t officially partner with most apparel companies.
March 26, 2026

Masters Gnome Craze Reaches New Level As Presales Hit $1,500

The frenzy around the popular souvenir item continues to grow.
April 1, 2026

Nike Down On Earnings Amid Longer-Than-Expected Turnaround

Analysts see signs of progress but warn the recovery is going slowly.
Sponsored

Baseball Is Back: MLB Opening Day Prices Soar

MLB Opening Day ticket prices are at record highs. TickPick data breaks down demand, pricing trends, and where fans are paying the most.
Jun 11, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Fanatics chief executive officer Michael Rubin attends game three of the 2025 NBA Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
February 20, 2026

Can One Patriots Fan Spur Fanatics to Change?

“I’m hoping that one meeting can lead to another meeting and another meeting.”
February 19, 2026

Nike Relaunch of ACG Is Bid to Catch Up in Outdoor Boom

Nike’s sub-brand, which stands for All Conditions Gear, originally debuted in 1989.
May 29, 2025; Dublin, Ohio, USA; A Callaway golf bag rests on the first green during the first round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday golf tournament.
February 13, 2026

Callaway Expects Tariff Costs to Reach $75M by End of 2026

The golf equipment manufacturer is being hit by tariffs.
February 11, 2026

TaylorMade’s ‘Mud Ball’ Feud With Callaway Takes Twist Over Paint

The paint on TaylorMade’s new golf balls uses “microcoating” technology.