Welcome to our dedicated page for Nike Cl B SEC filings (Ticker: NKE), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
NIKE, Inc. filings document operating results, capital structure, governance changes and material events for the athletic footwear and apparel company. Recent Form 8-K disclosures furnish quarterly results, including NIKE Brand, NIKE Direct and wholesale channel information, inventory trends, gross margin commentary and non-GAAP currency-neutral measures.
The filing record also covers material agreements such as the company's 364-Day Credit Agreement and unsecured revolving credit facility, exit or disposal activity charges related to organizational changes, executive appointments and role eliminations, shareholder voting matters, and corrections to product purchase obligation disclosures from the annual report. These documents record NIKE's financing arrangements, governance actions, liquidity disclosures and public-company reporting obligations.
NIKE, Inc. is calling a virtual 2026 annual meeting on September 8, 2026 at 9:00 a.m. Pacific Time, where shareholders will vote on electing 11 directors, approving executive compensation, ratifying PricewaterhouseCoopers as auditor, increasing shares in the Employee Stock Purchase Plan, and two shareholder proposals on charitable-discrimination reporting and environmental targets.
The company highlights a majority-independent board, a separated Chair and CEO, and a dual-class structure in which Class A and Class B elect directors separately but share identical economic rights and one vote per share on other matters. Four new independent directors have joined in the past five years and one long‑serving director will retire.
Executive pay follows a pay‑for‑performance model with heavy weighting to long‑term equity. For fiscal 2026, the Performance Sharing Plan used Adjusted Revenue and Adjusted EBIT plus MBOs for non‑CEO executives, yielding payouts of 74% of target for the CEO and 78% for other NEOs after negative discretion. Performance stock units for 2024–2026 paid out at 0%, and realizable CEO pay for fiscal 2025–2026 is about half of reported grant‑date value. A CFO transition is planned for August–September 2026.
NIKE, Inc. describes its global athletic footwear, apparel and equipment business for fiscal 2026, highlighting its position as the largest seller worldwide. NIKE Brand and Converse sales in the United States represented approximately 44% of total revenues in 2026, with non-U.S. markets contributing about 56%.
The company distributes through NIKE Direct digital and retail channels and wholesale partners, operating 347 retail stores in the United States and 641 outside the United States, supported by extensive distribution centers. Manufacturing is heavily outsourced: in fiscal 2026, about 52% of NIKE Brand footwear came from Vietnam, 27% from Indonesia and 16% from China, with apparel production spread across 34 countries.
As of May 31, 2026 NIKE employed approximately 73,000 people worldwide and emphasizes culture, inclusion and comprehensive benefits. No single customer accounted for 10% or more of consolidated revenues. Key risks outlined include global economic volatility, intense competition, dependence on contract manufacturers, evolving digital and AI technologies, climate and sustainability pressures, cybersecurity and reputational challenges.
NIKE, Inc. reported mixed results for its fiscal 2026 fourth quarter and full year ended May 31, 2026. Full year revenue was $46.4 billion, flat on a reported basis, while net income declined 3% to $3.1 billion and diluted EPS fell 3% to $2.10.
Fourth quarter revenue was $11.0 billion, down 1%, but net income surged to $1.1 billion and diluted EPS to $0.72, largely driven by an expected $986 million recovery of International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) tariffs. This lifted gross margin by about 900 basis points to 49.2%.
Wholesale revenue grew while NIKE Direct and Converse declined, with notable weakness in Greater China and EMEA, partly offset by North America growth. NIKE returned about $2.5 billion to shareholders in fiscal 2026, including $2.4 billion in dividends and $123 million in share repurchases.
NIKE, Inc. announced a planned chief financial officer transition and provided a brief update on expected fourth quarter fiscal 2026 results. David Denton will become Executive Vice President and CFO, with an annual base salary of $1,450,000, a target annual bonus equal to 120% of base salary, and an annual long-term incentive target of $11,500,000 split among performance-based RSUs, options and RSUs. He will also receive a one-time $7,250,000 cash award and a performance-based cash award with a $4,000,000 target that can pay out at 100%–200% of target based on Adjusted Operating Margin Growth through December 10, 2027.
Current CFO Matthew Friend will step down when Denton assumes the role, then serve as advisor to the CEO and remain employed through September 4, 2026, with existing salary and bonus targets preserved during the transition and eligibility for a $2,000,000 transition payment, subject to a release. The board also adopted a new Executive Severance Pay Plan providing the CEO with cash severance equal to two times base salary and target bonus, and other eligible executives with one and a half times those amounts, plus limited COBRA subsidies and outplacement support following certain involuntary terminations. NIKE reiterated it will report fourth quarter and full-year 2026 results on June 30, noting those results will include a one-time tariff refund benefit and are expected to be generally in line with prior guidance excluding that benefit.
NIKE, Inc. announced that longtime director John W. Rogers, Jr., who has served on the Board since 2018, plans to retire as a director at the Company’s September 2026 annual meeting of shareholders. The Board is expected to decrease to eleven directors following his retirement.
NIKE states that Rogers is a director in good standing and that his decision is not due to any disagreement with the Company or its policies or practices. After stepping down, he is expected to enter into a consulting arrangement and serve as a strategic advisor to Nike, focusing on the future of sport and community and social impact.
NIKE, Inc. Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Alagirisamy Venkatesh reported a tax-related share disposition tied to equity compensation. On vesting of restricted stock units, 9,853 shares of Class B Common Stock were withheld by NIKE at $44.65 per share to cover tax obligations, rather than being sold in the open market. After this withholding, Venkatesh directly holds 76,546.9272 Class B shares, including shares previously acquired through NIKE's Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
NIKE, Inc. executive Philip McCartney reported an open-market sale of Class B Common Stock and a tax-related share withholding. He sold 17,398 shares on June 12, 2026 at $46.18 per share under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on October 24, 2025.
On June 10, 2026, 9,836 shares were withheld by NIKE at $44.65 per share to cover tax obligations upon vesting of RSUs, which was not an open-market transaction. After these events, he holds 53,132.9272 shares directly and 1,837 shares indirectly through a retirement plan.
NIKE, Inc. executive chairman and director Mark G. Parker reported a bona fide gift of Class B Common Stock. On May 14, 2026, he gifted 22,230 shares at a reported price of $0.00 per share. After the gift, he directly holds 625,385 Class B shares and indirectly holds 39,823 shares through an account under The NIKE, Inc. 401(k) Plan. The filing notes that the transaction was effected pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted by Parker on December 24, 2025, indicating the gift was pre-arranged rather than opportunistic trading.
NIKE Inc. Schedule 13G shows State Street Corporation reported beneficial ownership of 59,588,679 shares of NIKE common stock, representing 5% of the class as of 03/31/2026. The filing lists shared voting power: 33,354,745 and shared dispositive power: 59,546,361. The filing is signed by Elizabeth Schaefer, Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer, on 05/12/2026.