Adobe shares took a beating on Monday, dropping 5.4% to close at $310.02. The sell-off came after Oppenheimer downgraded the stock from “outperform” to “market perform.”
Adobe Inc., ADBE
This wasn’t just another analyst opinion. It represented the latest blow in a growing wave of skepticism about Adobe’s ability to compete in an AI-driven world.
The downgrade followed a similar move by Goldman Sachs just weeks earlier. Goldman had moved Adobe from “Buy” to “Sell” with a $290 price target.
Analysts are sounding the alarm about a fundamental shift in the creative software market. Generative AI tools are democratizing design work that once required expensive Adobe subscriptions.
Companies like Canva, Figma, and OpenAI are offering AI-powered alternatives. These tools let users create professional-looking content without mastering complex software.
The concern isn’t just about competition. Analysts worry Adobe may need to ramp up its own AI spending to stay relevant. That could pressure profit margins even as revenue growth slows.
The pessimism represents Adobe’s worst analyst sentiment in more than ten years. BMO Capital downgraded the stock from “Outperform” to “Market Perform,” pointing to pressure on small businesses and freelancers.
Jefferies cut its rating from “Buy” to “Hold.” KeyBanc went further, moving Adobe to “Underweight” with a $310 price target.
The downgrades came despite Adobe posting strong Q4 results. The company exceeded expectations on net Annual Recurring Revenue and total revenue. But Wall Street is looking ahead, not backward.
Adobe shares closed at $311.55 at their lowest point, marking a new 52-week low. The stock has fallen 24.42% over the past year.
Shares are trading 33% below their February 2025 high of $464.11. Investors who bought $1,000 worth of Adobe stock five years ago would now have just $658.47.
The 5.4% daily drop represents one of only six moves greater than 5% for Adobe over the past year. The stock tends to be relatively stable, making Monday’s decline more notable for investors.
Adobe is down 6.7% since January began. The company faces questions about whether it can maintain its premium pricing as AI tools proliferate.
Previous concerns about Adobe surfaced ten months ago when the stock dropped 13.2%. That came after fourth-quarter results showed remaining performance obligations slightly missing estimates.
Full-year guidance at the time met expectations but didn’t exceed them. Wall Street wanted to see Adobe beat and raise, and the company couldn’t deliver that momentum.
The creative software giant now trades at a discount to peers on a P/E basis. Competitors are gaining ground in markets Adobe once dominated completely.
Adobe shares hit their 52-week low at $311.55 on Monday, reflecting mounting pressure from AI-powered competitors and analyst downgrades across major financial firms.
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