
Adidas, Puma Expected to Hike Sportswear Prices Following Nike as US Tariffs Hit
Adidas and Puma are likely to hike prices for running shoes and sportswear in the United States, following Nike's lead, analysts and investors said on Thursday, as US tariffs on imports drive costs up for retailers.
Nike on Wednesday said it would raise prices next week, charging up to $10 more for shoes currently costing more than $150, while keeping prices stable for products under $100. It is the biggest sportswear company by sales and market cap.
'That was the moment Adidas and Puma were waiting for,' said Robert Krankowski, sporting goods analyst at UBS.
Both German sportswear brands recently said they would not be the first movers in raising prices, instead waiting to see what rivals do.
'We should probably expect a similar decision from both Adidas and Puma because ... this is not Nike-specific, it is an industry issue. Everyone will be impacted by the tariffs,' Krankowski added.
US President Donald Trump has imposed a blanket 10 percent tariff on all imports, and hit China with a higher tariff of 30 percent. More worrying for sportswear brands, the key footwear and clothing manufacturing hub of Vietnam faces the threat of a steep 46 percent tariff returning in July.
Nike described the announced price increases as part of its normal seasonal planning, without mentioning tariffs.
Puma said on Thursday it is in talks with its US partners but has not decided whether or how it would adjust prices. Adidas did not immediately reply to a request for comment on its pricing plans.
'Historically, when the leading brand adjusts its prices, competitors tend to follow suit shortly thereafter,' said Federico Borin, an analyst at Janus Henderson.
How high other brands raise prices will depend on their assessments of US shoppers' willingness to pay, which varies based on how in-demand their sneakers or running shoes are.
Adidas, which has enjoyed a surge in sales thanks to trendy vintage shoes such as the $100 Samba and $120 Gazelle, could easily raise prices, said Simon Jaeger, portfolio manager at Flossbach von Storch in Cologne, Germany, which holds shares in Adidas and Nike.
Nike's price increases are relatively modest, Jaeger added, but 'what concerns me more is that the US consumer in general is not as strong as a couple of years ago.'
US consumer sentiment slumped further in May while one-year inflation expectations surged, according to the University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers on Friday.
Given weaker demand, sportswear brands will have to carefully manage their inventories at retailers, Jaeger said, to avoid oversupplying and being forced to discount.
Puma, whose sales in the US have been slowing, may have less room to hike prices than Adidas, said UBS' Krankowski.
Puma has said it aims to sell 4 million to 6 million pairs of its $100 Formula 1-inspired Speedcat sneaker this year but sales have been slower than expected, raising the question of whether it should hike the shoe's price.
'Puma doesn't have a massive first-mover advantage because the other brands are taking more momentum,' Krankowski said.
More expensive brands are also adapting as Nike hikes prices.
Running-focused On, whose adult sneakers sell for $130 and up, plans to increase prices in July on certain products in the US, saying this is part of its ambition to be the 'most premium' global sportswear brand and not a reaction to tariffs.
By Helen Reid; Editor: Rod Nickel
Learn more:
Nike to Raise Prices by Next Week, to Return to Selling on Amazon, Media Reports Say
The world's biggest sportswear brand is raising prices on several products next week and selling products on e-commerce giant Amazon.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
13 minutes ago
- CNBC
Trump on Musk criticism: I'm very disappointed in Elon Musk, I've done a lot for him
President Trump meets with German Chancellor Merz at the White House with EU trade in focus.


New York Post
18 minutes ago
- New York Post
Trump says he and Elon Musk ‘had a great relationship' but ‘don't know if we will anymore' after billionaire slams big beautiful bill
WASHINGTON — President Trump questioned his relationship with Elon Musk on Thursday after the tech mogul attacked the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — indicating their close alliance may be no more. 'Elon and I had a great relationship. I don't know if we will anymore,' Trump told reporters in the Oval Office before his bilateral sit-down with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. Advertisement 'He hasn't said bad about me personally, but I'm sure that'll be next. But I'm very disappointed … I've helped Elon a lot.' 4 Elon Musk listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, May 30, 2025. AP 4 House Speaker Mike Johnson was able to get the bill passed in the House. AP Musk has been on a three-day warpath against the Trump-endorsed reconciliation legislation in a slew of posts on X after departing as head of the Department of Government Efficiency on Friday, calling the measure 'disgusting' and urging Congress to 'kill the bill.' Advertisement The Tesla and SpaceX CEO publicly slammed the GOP proposal for potentially adding trillions to the deficit, and was privately irked by the removal of Biden-era tax credits for electric vehicles, among other grievances. 4 Trump responded to Musk's criticisms of his 'big beautiful bill.' Francis Chung/UPI/Shutterstock 'He's not the first. People leave my administration and they love us and then at some point they miss it so badly, and some of them embrace it and some of them actually become hostile. I don't know what it is, it's sort of Trump derangement syndrome, I guess they call it. … The glamor is gone, the whole world is different, and they become hostile,' Trump said of his former ally. 4 Musk criticized Trump's bill and called on Congress to 'KILL the BILL.' AFP via Getty Images 'I'm very disappointed because Elon knew the inner workings of this bill,' the president added. 'He never had a problem until right after he left.'
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump overpowers Musk's attacks on mega tax bill with blizzard of orders
WASHINGTON − After watching Elon Musk rip his signature bill throughout the day, President Donald Trump unleashed a flurry of executive actions that bulldozed the discourse to other matters. Although not the stated goal, the president's blizzard of proclamations on the night of June 4 ‒ reviving a controversial travel ban, ordering an investigation into former President Joe Biden's use of an autopen and banning Harvard University from welcoming international students ‒ was classic Trump: when the going gets tough, change the subject. Trump, never shy to lash out at his critics, has remained silent about Musk ‒ not a single Truth Social post ‒ as the world's richest man this week launched a full-out effort to kill what Trump has called his "big, beautiful, bill." (That could very likely change when Trump faces reporters Thursday as he hosts German Chancellor Friedrich Merz at the White House.) Not even a peep after Musk urged his 220 million followers on X, the social media platform he owns, to lobby their lawmakers to "KILL the BILL." More: President Trump bans travel from 12 nations, partially restricts entry from seven others The orders dropped later that evening. It came shortly after Trump attended a "summer soiree" for political appointees on the White House South Lawn, his first public appearance since playing golf over the weekend. "We don't want them," Trump said in pre-taped remarks on his proclamation to impose a full travel ban blocking the entry of foreign nationals from 12 countries into the United States, while partially restricting entry of citizens from seven other nations. Trump cited "national security risks" with these countries. Yet the timing of the order raised eyebrows. In his proclamation, Trump said Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Homeland Security Advisor Stephen Miller provided him a list on April 9 of countries to target with a travel ban. They were carrying out an executive order Trump signed on Jan. 20, the first day of his second term. Trump pointed to last weekend's fiery assault on pro-Jewish demonstrators in Boulder, Colorado, saying it "underscored the extreme dangers" posed by the entry of foreign nationals. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, a native of Egypt who came to the U.S. on a tourist visa in late 2022 and stayed after the visa expired, has been charged in the anti-Semitic attack. But Egypt is not among the countries facing new restrictions. The White House did not immediately say why it took Trump nearly two months after he received the report to take action. Democratic critics accused Trump of trying to shift the subject amid the legislative drama over the reconciliation bill. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn, said the travel ban is meant to "distract" to try to push through a "super unpopular" bill. "How do you get that done?' Murphy said in an interview on MSNBC. 'You distract people by making them think that they're at war with other Americans ‒ making them think that they have something to fear from people who look different from them or speak a different language.' More: Trump orders investigation of Joe Biden's alleged 'cognitive decline' and use of autopen If a sweeping travel ban wasn't enough for one night, Trump also issued an order directing an investigation of Biden's alleged "cognitive decline" to determine who decided his signature should be applied to official documents by autopen. Biden's use of an autopen, in particular for the last-minute pardons of family members, has become a fixation on the right. Trump has acknowledged that he, too, has also used an automatic pen but claims only for trivial items like responding to letters. In another extraordinary proclamation, Trump suspended Harvard University from welcoming foreign students and researchers, escalating a battle with arguably the nation's most prestigious university. Musk's barrage of criticism over the deficit implications for the massive tax and policy bill has put the legislation in jeopardy by giving skeptical Republican senators ‒ who Trump has criticized over their objections despite his constraint with Musk ‒ cover to voice their opposition. A senior White House official told USA TODAY that Trump is disappointed by Musk's criticisms over the tax bill but the president is committed to getting the legislation passed. More: 'Kill the bill': Elon Musk tries to nuke Trump's GOP tax plan Musk's tirade comes after he left the White House as a senior adviser last week after leading the government-slashing Department of Government Efficiency for the past four months. Although Musk had started to voice criticism with Trump's bill before his exit, Trump had seemed to smooth things over when he welcomed the Tesla and SpaceX CEO into the Oval Office for a send-off news conference. Yet the rift between the Musk and the White House had started to widen. Musk, prior to his White House departure, asked for his special government employee status to be extended beyond 130 days to allow him to continue to lead DOGE, but the White House declined, a source told USA TODAY. Last weekend, Musk expressed disappointment after Trump withdrew his nominee for administrator of NASA, Jared Isaacman, a billionaire commercial astronaut with close ties to Musk. And, Trump's bill would also end $7,500 consumer tax credits for buyers of electric vehicles, a Biden policy that has benefited electric car companies like Musk's Tesla. Contributing: Francesca Chambers of USA TODAY Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump overpowers Musk's attacks with blizzard of orders