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So Tim Cook just dropped nearly $3M on Nike stock back in December, buying 50,000 shares. That's not exactly pocket change, and the market definitely noticed. But here's the thing everyone's missing - just because the Apple CEO made a move doesn't automatically mean it's a good signal for the rest of us.
Yeah, Cook sits on Nike's board, so he's an insider. And yeah, it was an open market purchase at full price, which does suggest some conviction. But let me be real - board members have incentives beyond just making money. Sometimes it's about showing alignment with shareholders or steadying the ship during rough waters. Cook's move could be both a genuine vote of confidence AND a governance play.
Now let's look at what's actually happening with Nike's business, because that matters way more than one insider buy. The company just reported Q2 results and honestly? It's messy. Revenue only grew 1% year-over-year. That's basically flat. The real problem though is where that growth came from. Wholesale revenue jumped 8%, but Nike Direct - the direct-to-consumer channel through stores and digital - actually fell 8%. That's the channel that shows real consumer demand, and it's going backwards.
Margins are getting crushed too. Gross margin dropped 300 basis points to 40.6%, and net income tanked 32%. Nike's CEO Elliott Hill is talking about being in the "middle innings of a comeback," which is code for "we've got a long way to go." Meanwhile, the athleisure space is absolutely brutal right now. Lululemon, Vuori, Hoka, Adidas - everyone's fighting for the same customers. Nike's brand is still massive globally, but that moat isn't what it used to be.
Here's where I struggle with buying at current levels: The stock's trading at a 37 P/E ratio. Forward P/E is even worse at 40. When earnings are declining and sales are barely moving, those multiples just don't make sense to me. Yeah, the dividend yield is solid at 2.6% and the balance sheet is rock solid. But with tariff uncertainty, margin pressure, and weakness in direct-to-consumer, I don't see the risk-reward setup right now.
Tim Cook's purchase is interesting, don't get me wrong. But for me it's not enough to justify loading up on Nike at these valuations. The turnaround might work out long-term, but the company still has too much work to do and the stock doesn't look cheap enough to compensate for that execution risk.