The market is no longer pricing Adobe for dominance. After a 48% slide over the past twelve months, the stock closed at €178.16 on Monday — a mere 4.58% above its 52-week trough. That decline is not just a reaction to a missed quarter; it reflects a deeper question about whether the company’s grip on the creative and marketing workflow is loosening as generative AI reshapes the landscape.
Adobe has not been idle in responding. It unveiled the Firefly AI Assistant in April and, in June, made its CX Enterprise Coworker generally available — an agentic layer that orchestrates tasks across Analytics, content creation and journey management, including integration with third-party AI platforms. But investors remain sceptical. The stock trades 14.85% below its 50-day moving average and 30% below its 200-day average of €254.90, signalling that the market is pricing in significant execution risk.
Compounding the strategic pivot is an abrupt leadership vacuum. Finance chief Dan Durn left the company on 15 June to join chipmaker Marvell Technology, with Steve Day stepping in as interim CFO. Meanwhile, Chief Executive Shantanu Narayen announced earlier in the year that he will vacate his post once a successor is found. The simultaneous search for two top executives is rare on Wall Street and adds a layer of governance uncertainty at a time when the company can least afford it.
The operational picture, by contrast, remains robust. Adobe posted a record second-quarter revenue of $6.62 billion, up 13% year-on-year, and adjusted earnings per share of $5.96 beat analyst expectations. Active users climbed to 850 million, and the base of free creative users nearly doubled to 90 million as the company prioritised a freemium model over near-term monetisation. Yet that very strategy is crimping growth in subscription revenue, forcing Adobe to postpone planned price hikes. The leadership departures have only sharpened the focus on the revenue trade-off.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Adobe?
Analysts have responded by downgrading the stock. Evercore slashed its price target to $225, while Wolfe Research and Stifel removed their buy recommendations. The criticism centres on the weaker outlook for annual recurring revenue and the cloud of management instability. The stock now sits almost exactly at the lower end of its 52-week range — the high was €347.70 — having lost more than 37% since the start of the year.
The technical picture is equally strained. The relative strength index stands at 30.9, close to oversold territory, and the annualised 30-day volatility has jumped to 51.25%. That has tempted some tactical investors to look for exhaustion signals, but stress alone is not a recovery thesis. The consensus analyst price target of €249.48 implies a potential upside of roughly 40%, but that gap reflects a difference in valuation, not a catalyst in hand.
What could close that gap? Partnerships with NVIDIA on next-generation Firefly models and agentic workflows show the right direction, but they have yet to translate into visible monetisation or renewed narrative strength. Meanwhile, competitors such as Figma and Canva are also embedding AI aggressively, blurring the moat that once defined Adobe’s ecosystem.
The market has shifted its assessment from “how good are the numbers?” to “who will lead the next architecture of the company?” That discount is rooted in conviction, not earnings. At €178.16, near the year’s low and far below long-term averages, Adobe is being asked to rebuild its dominance from scratch — while simultaneously replacing the people who built it in the first place.
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