Nike, Inc. trades on the open market, but real control never left Phil Knight.
Through a dual-class share structure and entities like Swoosh LLC, Knight and his inner circle hold the high-vote Class A shares — locking in permanent control while everyone else gets low-vote Class B stock.
The Setup
• Public investors: put up the capital
• Phil Knight: keeps the power
This isn’t accidental — it’s engineered. You can own a meaningful economic stake in Nike and still have virtually no say in how it’s run.
Let’s Call It What It Is
This is legacy control, not meritocracy.
Control doesn’t shift based on performance, results, or shareholder sentiment — it stays concentrated around the founder and those closest to him. When influence is effectively inherited or hand-selected, governance stops being about accountability and starts looking a lot more like nepotism with a stock ticker.
Why It Matters
• Shareholder votes are largely symbolic
• Leadership faces limited real pressure
• Strategic mistakes don’t trigger real consequences
The market absorbs the downside. Control stays put.
Bottom Line
Nike isn’t a truly public company — it’s a founder-controlled empire wrapped in a public listing.
And if you’re buying the stock, you’re not buying influence.
You’re buying into a structure where one family calls the shots — no matter what.