Dr. Martens CEO Is Latest Shoe Leader to Reinvest With Stock Purchases

Dr. Martens’ chief executive officer Ije Nwokorie is the latest footwear executive to signal confidence in their respective brands via a new share purchase.

On Tuesday, the British footwear company noted that Nwokorie bought 112,500 ordinary shares of Dr. Martens at a price of 0.761 pence per share. The purchase is worth 85,612.50 pounds, or approximately $114,918.94.

Company executives typically make sizable purchases of company stock when they want to send a message to Wall Street that they believe in the future of their firms, a notion that Spurwink River advisor Matt Powell agreed with. “I believe executives buying their own stock is intended to show personal confidence and commitment to their companies,” Powell noted.

The move follows the company’s report last month that it saw profit before taxes in fiscal 2026 increase 9.7 percent to 32.7 million pounds from 29.8 million pounds the prior year. Revenue fell 1.5 percent to 764.9 million pounds from 776.3 million pounds in the same year-ago period.

The British boot maker in fiscal year 2025 stabilized its business, followed by a pivot in fiscal 2026 to be consumer first. And now after returning to profit growth, the shoe firm will focus on scaling the business in fiscal 2027.

Nwokorie said last month that while there is still work to do in pivoting the business, the next phase will be the scaling component of its overall strategy.

“In fiscal 2027, we will lean in with increased investment in the brand and targeted retail store upgrades, as well as continuing to build strong wholesale partner relationships to support demand at scale,” he said.

Nwokorie isn’t the only shoe executive to reinvest in his company. In May, On cofounders David Allemann, Casper Coppetti, and Olivier Bernhard each acquired 60,000 shares of Class A stock at $2.2 million, or an aggregate of 180,000 share for purchase price totaling $6.6 million.

In April, Nike chief executive officer Elliott Hill, its lead director and Apple CEO Tim Cook, as well as director and Ariel Capital Management founder, John W. Rogers, bought Class B common stock in the Swoosh, with the combined purchases totaling 52,660 shares, or $2.3 million.

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