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Everyone is looking at Nike’s massive drawdown and wondering if this is the time to buy the bottom. To be fair, the bullish case isn't crazy: it's an iconic global brand, they've shaken up leadership, and the stock is hovering around decade-low levels. A successful turnaround is absolutely on the table. However, investing is all about opportunity cost and risk-adjusted returns, and when you look at Nike objectively today, the math simply doesn't justify an entry right now.
Even after the brutal drop, Nike isn't trading at deep-value, "priced for disaster" levels. You are still paying a multiple that assumes management can fix the structural issues fairly quickly. If the turnaround takes longer than expected, which large-scale retail restructurings usually do, there is still plenty of room for the stock to fall further. Furthermore, Nike isn't just fighting its own supply chain and legacy inventory issues; they are actively losing the premium consumer to agile competitors like Hoka and On Running. Winning those buyers back will require heavy investment in innovation and marketing, which will likely keep margins depressed in the near term.
This brings us to the ultimate dealbreaker: opportunity cost. Why park your capital in a complex, multi-year "show-me" story with significant execution risk, when the broader market is full of companies offering better visibility, stronger momentum, and less uncertainty? Nike will probably figure it out and recover in the long run, but right now, you are taking on the risk of a messy restructuring without getting a wide enough margin of safety in return. Until there are concrete, measurable signs that top-line growth and market share are stabilizing, there are simply better, lower-risk places to put your money to work.
My reasoning is explained in detail in the article.