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Nike (NKE) posted fiscal first-quarter results that far surpassed consensus estimates, swinging back to a quarterly profit as digital sales surged and lockdown measures eased to allow customers back into stores worldwide.
Here were the main metrics from the report, compared to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg:
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Q1 Earnings per share: 95 cents vs. 46 cents expected and 86 cents Y/Y
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Q1 Revenue: $10.59 billion vs. $9.11 billion expected and $10.66 billion Y/Y
Shares of Nike jumped more than 8% after reporting results, following a gain of 15% for the year-to-date through Tuesday’s close.
Nike continued to gain ground in digital sales, which accelerated even as the opportunity for in-person sales increased during the quarter. Nike’s digital sales grew 82% in the first quarter, following a 75% jump in the prior period.
“Our results this quarter continue to demonstrate Nike’s full competitive advantage, as we strengthen our position in the midst of disruption,” Nike CEO John Donahoe said in a statement. “In this dynamic environment, no one can match our pace of launching innovative product and our brand’s deep connection to consumers. These strengths, coupled with our digital acceleration, are unlocking Nike’s long-term market potential.”
The company’s first-quarter results included the three months through August, capturing the period during which pandemic-related store closures largely abated and made way for a return to traffic at brick-and-mortar locations. Nearly all of Nike’s locations were open across North America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), and Greater China during the quarter.
Both Nike’s Greater China and EMEA regions saw quarterly revenue increase over last year, by 8% and 5%, respectively. But revenue from North America – the company’s largest segment – dropped again in the first quarter by 1%, as more than 20% declines in apparel and equipment sales outweighed a return to growth in footwear.
But across regions, even as stores reopen, Nike noted that it still continues to experience “year-over-year declines in physical retail traffic across the marketplace due to COVID-19 impacts and safety-related measures.”
Nike’s most recently quarterly performance marked a stark contrast from its fiscal fourth quarter through May, when nearly 90% of Nike-owned stores outside of Greater China were closed for eight weeks during the quarter and “significantly impacting” those period’s results. Nike last quarter had swung to its first quarterly loss in two years as net losses totaled $790 million.
For its fiscal fourth quarter, however, net income came in at $1.5 billion, pushing the company well above breakeven and representing growth of 11% over last year, with lower selling and administrative expenses offsetting a decline in gross margins, which came as the company leaned on promotions to move through excess inventory. Revenue of $10.59 billion ticked down less than 1% over last year, improving after a 38% drop in the fourth quarter.