Beats跨界联动耐克破圈! 苹果(AAPL.US)欲再掀可穿戴消费热潮 耐克(NKE.US)押注“运动科技”叙事

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The Tong Finance APP has learned that Apple Inc. (AAPL.US), a leader in consumer electronics in the United States, announced that its important subsidiary—Beats, a headphone and audio equipment brand—will collaborate with American sportswear brand Nike (NKE.US) to launch a limited edition Powerbeats Pro 2 headphones. This version features the iconic NIKE SWOOSH logo of the sports apparel leader, marking Beats’ first co-branded hardware collaboration with an external sports brand.

This is also the first direct partnership between Beats and Nike, although Nike has long collaborated with Apple on the Apple Watch and related core accessory ecosystems. The joint launch of co-branded headphones with Nike will undoubtedly significantly enhance Apple’s core product ecosystem and brand at both the product and brand levels, serving as a long-term boost for brand and ecosystem synergy.

On Tuesday, Beats stated in an official release that the “Powerbeats Pro 2 – Nike Special Edition” headphones will be available online and at select Apple Store locations starting March 20 local time, priced the same as the regular version at $250. The co-branded product’s charging case features a striking matte black finish with Volt speckles, and the inside of the lid bears Nike’s classic “Just Do It” slogan.

The Powerbeats Pro 2 marks Apple’s first attempt to directly integrate real-time heart rate tracking into headphone hardware, a feature that will soon also appear in the upgraded AirPods Pro 3. This Beats product offers up to 45 hours of battery life (including the charging case) and has been significantly improved from the first-generation Powerbeats Pro, adding active noise cancellation, redesigned ear hooks, and wireless charging.

NBA star LeBron James, a long-time Beats ambassador from the Los Angeles Lakers, has been invited again to help promote this collaboration. The campaign will feature him in a “comedic” style, appearing on a golf course rather than a basketball court.

Apple’s partnership with Nike dates back to the early iPod era, when the sportswear and sneaker giant launched a shoe-in step counter that could connect with the music player, allowing users to track running data—years before professional-grade fitness trackers entered the mainstream market.

The Powerbeats Pro 2 already features real-time heart rate monitoring, up to 45 hours of battery life, active noise cancellation, and wireless charging—attributes suited for sports scenarios. For Apple’s growth prospects, this co-branded effort leverages Nike’s immense strength in the North American sports market to reinforce Beats’ position in the “fitness/training headphones” vertical and extend Apple’s reach in wearable and health hardware into higher-frequency, broader-audience sports scenarios, potentially sparking another wave of wearable consumer electronics enthusiasm.

Considering that Apple’s Services revenue exceeded $100 billion in fiscal 2025, but revenue from wearable consumer electronics (Wearables, Home, and Accessories) declined significantly in the first quarter of fiscal 2026, such collaborations seem more aimed at increasing user engagement and leveraging hardware differentiation to reach larger potential audiences, rather than merely boosting short-term sales with limited editions.

For Nike, the strategic value of this collaboration is even clearer. It is part of the brand revitalization and direct-to-consumer channel repair efforts, aligning with Beats hardware to “co-define sports scenario hardware.” Nike has faced significant pressure in recent quarters on its Direct (sales directly to consumers) and Digital (online digital sales) channels: in fiscal 2025, Nike Direct revenue was about $18.8 billion, down 13% year-over-year; in the second quarter of fiscal 2026, Nike Direct continued to shrink, declining 8% YoY, with Nike Brand Digital revenue dropping sharply by 14%.

Against this backdrop, the collaboration is not primarily about generating a large hardware revenue pool for Nike but about expanding the brand’s value from just footwear and apparel into a broader “training, running, and data-driven sports experience” ecosystem. It also aims to reach higher-value potential members through channels like SNKRS, Nike.com, and Apple, significantly improving brand engagement and increasing the efficiency of reaching potential users.

Overall, Apple gains more from a “significant reinforcement of a high-margin wearable ecosystem,” further consolidating its brand position in sports and health-oriented consumer electronics. Nike, on the other hand, benefits from “reactivating its brand and membership activities.” Apple excels at bundling hardware, software, distribution, and services into a high-loyalty consumer loop; Nike is best at transforming sports culture and brand influence into consumer willingness based on sports branding. This collaboration will help Nike, during a period of pressure on its footwear and apparel core business and while digital recovery takes time, to leverage Apple’s hardware and distribution capabilities to re-anchor itself as a more complete sports + tech lifestyle brand.

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