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Nike CEO says its comeback plan is taking longer than expected, sending shares tumbling more than 8%

Nike’s “Win Now” turnaround plan isn’t seeing immediate results.

The sports giant announced its third-quarter earnings results for fiscal year 2026 on Tuesday, and revenue remained flat at $11.3 billion. Nike shares moved lower after market close, falling more than 8% despite the company delivering better-than-expected results.

On the call, CEO Elliott Hill said the company’s comeback is taking “longer than I would like,” but he and other executives expressed confidence in the approach.

So far, running is leading the charge with growth. It was the first category to move into the “sport offense,” which puts sports back at the center of its mission, as the company leans more into performance wear.

“The pace of progress is different across the portfolio, and the areas we prioritized first continue to drive momentum,” Hill said in the earnings press release.

Meanwhile, other parts of the portfolio, including Greater China, Converse, and sportswear, are still in earlier stages of their comebacks, the company said. Nike’s digital sales declined 9% in a drop that the company said is due in part to being too promotional with higher markdowns.

Sportswear continues to be a headwind to revenue growth for Nike as it declined by low double digits in the quarter. It’s continuing its efforts to clean up inventory, which it said has taken several quarters to execute. The Nike sportswear and Jordan streetwear teams are moving from playing defense to playing offense, the company said.

“There is both an art and a science to seeding, igniting, and scaling new sportswear styles,” Hill said.

In March 2025, Nike publicly rolled out its turnaround plan, which Hill calls its “Win Now” strategy. The effort has reoriented the company around sports from running to basketball, rather than gender or age.

CFO Matthew Friend said Nike expects revenues to be down low single-digits compared to the prior year, with gains in North America offset by declines in Greater China. Assuming no significant changes, after the first quarter of fiscal 2027, higher tariffs are expected to ease for Nike, Friend said on the call.

“Given the softness in sportswear, traffic patterns, and promotions across Europe, as well as recent disruption in the Middle East, we anticipate ending the fourth quarter with elevated inventory,” Friend said.

The company expects to finish its “Win Now” actions by the end of 2026.




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Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke let AI read his MRI, and build the software to do it

Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke recently shared how he used AI to create software for an incredibly niche, but important, situation.

His annual MRI scan comes on a USB stick, but requires commercial Windows software to open. Instead of going in search of this existing software, he ran Anthropic’s Claude AI model directly on the MRI files and prompted it to build a web-based viewer.

The result, he said, looked “way better.” With one more prompt, the tool even annotated the images with the findings from the scan.

Lütke called this an example of “reflexively” reaching for AI — training yourself to instinctively use it to build bespoke tools when off-the-shelf software falls short.

“You want to train your brain on this intuition,” he wrote in a thread on X that got more than 7.5 million views.

This type of experimentation takes more upfront time, and it requires challenging your assumptions about how things should be done, according to Bernard Golden, CEO of Navica, a Silicon Valley-based technology analysis, consulting, and investment firm.

“You have to spend some brainpower to reflect on established habits to see how AI could be inserted, but doing so has a snowball effect: the more you try, the more you do,” Golden told Business Insider. “It’s like learning a language. It’s uncomfortable to try speaking when you’re starting out, but doing so accelerates your skills and confidence.”

Sign up for BI’s Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.




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Alistair Barr, global tech editor of Business Insider, smiles at the camera while wearing a blue and white striped shirt.

A software CEO called me on the weekend recently with painful predictions. One is already coming true.

On a recent weekend, I was playing with my new puppy when my phone rang. On the other end was the CEO of a major public software company with a warning: the industry was headed for painful financial reset.

I can’t say who this is because he doesn’t want to be identified, talking about sensitive topics — and he wanted to speak honestly, without the usual restrictions of his company’s public relations department. These are the times you really listen!

The topic was broadly about how AI is disrupting software and impacting the business models of companies that offer software as a service, or SaaS. I’ve covered this deeply for about a year, so this wasn’t a surprise. But one of his main messages was unexpected — and is already proving prescient.

This CEO said stock-based compensation, or SBC, is too high for SaaS companies now. Future revenue growth may not be as strong anymore, so SBC has to come down, and the financial discipline of the software industry has to improve. This year, SaaS companies will have to cut a lot of employees to adjust, he predicted.

I’ll explain this more in a second, but this reality is already beginning to play out. On Wednesday, a prominent software provider called Atlassian said it’s cutting 10% of its workforce. That followed Block’s 40% job cuts.

Both companies attributed some of these layoffs to the impact of generative AI. However, they both said they’re still hiring engineers.

“Five years from now, we’ll have more engineers working for our company than we do today,” Atlassian CEO Mike Cannon-Brooks said in October, adding, “They will be more efficient.”

So what’s really happening here? Let’s go back to the weekend call I got from that other software CEO.

The rise of cheaper software

One broad message he shared is that generative AI is making it much easier to create software. This means the supply of software is skyrocketing, so according to the law of supply and demand, the value of software is falling.

This won’t mean the death of SaaS. In fact, cheaper and more prevalent software will be a huge boon to the tech industry because more people will use it. And smart software engineers will be needed to check that all this software is still working — and to understand deeply why it’s working or not.

“Engineering is changing, and great engineers are more important than ever,” said Boris Cherny, the head of Anthropic’s Claude Code, one of the main drivers of AI software disruption.

So, what’s likely happening is that generative AI is changing how software is made and maintained, and upending how software companies charge for their offerings.

For now, this could mean slower revenue growth for software providers. And this is what brings us back to the need for more financial discipline in the sector — and to the issue of stock-based compensation, or SBC.

Engineers and other tech talent are wooed by software companies with generous chunks of equity, known as restricted stock units, or RSUs. The awards are often valued based on the market price on the day they’re granted.

That works well when stocks are rising. But software stocks have taken a beating in recent months on concern about slowing growth and the potential impact of AI.

To keep the same level of stock compensation with the same size workforce, software companies will soon have to issue millions of extra shares. That will dilute existing shareholders and cut deeply into future earnings per share, one of the main measures of any company’s financial health.

“SBC (stock-based compensation) is coming up a lot more in our investor conversations,” Raimo Lenshow, a software analyst at Barclays, wrote in a recent research note.

He assessed software company valuations after the recent SaaS swoon in the market. Stocks looked more compelling, until he included SBC in the analysis.

“Adjusting for the large levels of stock-based compensation, the situation looks less rosy,” he warned.

So what can software companies do to address investor concerns about this? One solution is to cut jobs. That immediately reduces stock-based compensation costs, because companies don’t need to issue more new stock to those folks being let go (and future vesting ends for these people, too). This improves earnings, based on old-school GAAP measures — which is where investors like to go during times of stress in the tech industry.

This was a big driver of Atlassian’s job cuts this week, according to William Blair analysts.

“For Atlassian, it is important to moderate SBC lower as it has one of the highest levels of stock comp in the industry,” they wrote in a research note. “This has recently become a louder conversation as tech investors look for more profits from scaled businesses.”

This happened in 2022 as well, and Business Insider covered it a lot. Back then, the tech industry was coming down hard from a pandemic-era hiring binge. Growth was slowing and SBC looked completely unsustainable. Brutal financial discipline ensued and thousands of tech workers lost their jobs.

We’re in a similar moment now, according to that CEO who called me on the weekend. Before he got off the phone, he said financial discipline has to improve.

Sign up for BI’s Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.




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