meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Business of Fashion Podcast

Have Sneakers Lost Their Cool?

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Business, Fashion & Beauty, Arts

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 21 January 2026

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sneakers have driven growth for the sportswear industry for decades, in recent years accelerated by the pandemic and work-from-home culture. However, a recent Bank of America report sparked debate by suggesting the sneaker boom may be nearing an end, including a rare double downgrade of Adidas. 

On The Debrief, sports correspondent Mike Sykes joins hosts Brian Baskin and Sheena Butler-Young to examine whether slowing growth marks a genuine reversal of casual dressing, or a return to more sustainable demand shaped by price sensitivity, comfort and experimentation rather than hype.

 

Key Insights:


  • The Bank of America report struck a nerve because it questioned a decades-long growth story about the sneaker industry. “This one was the first one in a while that seemed to spell a bit of doom and gloom for the industry,” Sykes says. “Everyone has been on pins and needles for the last couple of years as Nike has been in its downturn… and Bank of America is saying, yeah, it’s over.” The double downgrade of Adidas amplified that anxiety. “If Adidas is getting the double downgrade here, what does that mean for everyone else?” Sykes asks. The implication was not just brand-specific weakness, but the possibility that the sneaker cycle itself had run out of road.


  • However, slower growth does not necessarily mean sneakers are ‘over’. Instead, the data may reflect a market adjusting after years of abnormal acceleration. “Everyone else seems to feel like things are going at least okay,” Sykes says. “Maybe not perfect, but nothing is perfect in this economy right now.” He notes that among the analysts and industry figures he spoke to, there was little appetite for declaring the trend finished. “People are still into sneakers,” says Sykes. 


  • Sneakers and sportswear have lasted because they are easy to understand, easy to buy and relatively affordable compared to many fashion categories. “Sneakers are generally just accessible for people. It’s an easy trend to follow,” Sykes says. “You can easily spot which ones are cool and it’s very easy to hop on the bandwagon.” That accessibility matters even more in a strained economy. As Sykes highlights, with consumers weighing “do I wanna buy this next outfit or do I want to buy groceries,” sportswear’s practicality continues to anchor demand.


  • For the sneaker cycle to truly turn, something has to replace it – either a new hit product within the category or a different footwear trend entirely. Right now, what is emerging is not a shift toward formality, but a widening of what casual footwear looks like, as displayed by the popularity of Nike’s ReactX Rejuven8 recovery clog. “Speaking to people who have wanted this shoe, it’s mostly about the comfort,” Sykes explains. “As far as ending the casualisation trend, this is not a shoe that would do that. This is a shoe that would entrench it.”


Additional Resources:




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the D-Berry from the Business of Fashion, where each week we delve

0:11.9

into our most popular B-O-F professional stories with the correspondence who created them.

0:16.9

I'm senior correspondent, Sheena Butler Young.

0:19.6

And I'm executive editor, Brian Baskin.

0:22.4

15 years ago, the concept of office sneakers was brand new.

0:26.5

Google records virtually zero searches for the term before 2011,

0:30.5

and the idea didn't really take off for another decade after that

0:34.0

when companies started calling employees back to work after the pandemic.

0:38.6

Sneakers are the symbol of a decades-long trend toward more casual dressing. In most

0:43.9

workplaces today, spotting someone in Nike or Adidas, maybe even the CEO, would be unremarkable.

0:50.9

But new analysis from Bank of America suggests that sneaker sales have peaked. Sports

0:55.8

where sales growth has decelerated, once hot styles like the Adidasamba, are cooling,

1:00.7

and analysts are questioning whether the category and maybe the whole casualization trend has reached

1:05.6

a natural ceiling. Joining us to discuss is B-O-F reporter and resident sneaker expert Mike Sykes.

1:11.8

Mike, welcome to the debrief.

1:13.4

Thanks for having me.

1:14.8

All right.

1:15.1

So my inbox is full of reports like that one from Bank of America.

1:18.8

Why did this one cause such a stir?

1:22.0

This one was the first one in a while in a really long time that sort of seemed like it spelled a bit of doom and gloom for

1:30.0

the industry. And I feel like everyone has been on pins and needles for the last couple years

1:35.9

as Nike has been in its downturn, just because people seem to be sort of over this whole trend

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Business of Fashion, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Business of Fashion and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.