KEY POINTS
  • Nike is investing more in its women's business.
  • This push comes at a time when the retailer is looking for new pockets of growth in North America.
  • Women's apparel still represents less than 25 percent of Nike's total sales, but the U.S. women's market for shoes and clothing is much larger than men's.
Christy Hedgpeth poses with Arike Ogunbowale after being drafted by the New York Liberty during the 2019 WNBA Draft on April 10, 2019 at Nike New York Headquarters in New York, New York.

Nike is making a bigger, bolder investment in women. And it's using sports as one way to get to them.

The athletic apparel giant last week hosted the 2019 WNBA draft from a basketball court inside its New York headquarters, about two years into its deal to be the exclusive on-court uniform and clothing retailer for the league.