Adobe Inc. (NASDAQ: ADBE) this week reported strong results for the third quarter of fiscal 2025, with revenues and profit growing year-over-year and beating estimates. The company, having emerged as a leader in AI creative applications, once again raised its full-year revenue and earnings per share guidance. Adobe’s leadership stated that the company’s AI strategy is beginning to deliver monetization as expected.
Stock Fluctuates
The San Jose, California-headquartered design software maker’s stock rallied soon after the earnings announcement, reflecting the initial investor optimism, but pared most of the gains in the following session. ADBE had s rather unimpressive start to 2025 and has steadily declined since then, underperforming the S&P 500 index. The value has dropped about 40% in the past twelve months. From an investment perspective, the valuation appears attractive, given the company’s effective strategy to deal with disruption from the rise of generative AI and recent innovations across the product portfolio.
The tech firm’s third-quarter earnings, excluding one-off items, increased to $5.31 per share from $4.65 per share in the year-ago period, beating estimates. Reported net income was $1.77 billion or $4.18 per share in the August quarter, compared to $1.68 billion or $3.76 per share in Q3 2024. The company posted revenues of $5.99 billion for Q3, compared to $5.41 billion in the corresponding quarter last year. Revenues came in above Wall Street’s expectations.
Outlook
The management now expects full-year FY25 revenues to be in the range of $23.65 billion to $23.70 billion, with an estimated 11.3% year-over-year growth in Digital Media annualized recurring revenue. On an adjusted basis, full-year adjusted net income per share is expected to be between $20.80 and $20.85. The forecast is higher than the guidance the company issued a few months ago. It is looking for unadjusted earnings of $16.53-6.58 per share for FY25. For the fourth quarter, Adobe targets revenues in the range of $6.075 billion to $6.125 billion, and adjusted earnings per share in the $5.35-$5.40 range.
“Our strategy to harness AI is focused on infusing it across our category-leading applications to provide more value and deliver innovative, new AI-first products. We’ve done a great job executing this strategy by accelerating innovation with a focus on offering greater value to creative and marketing professionals and business professionals, and consumers. Creativity has always been core to the company’s mission,” Adobe’s CEO Santanu Narayen said during his post-earnings interaction with analysts.
Strategy
Adobe has come under pressure from AI disruption and emerging competitors lately, which prompted it to initiate a mix of strategic pivots, product innovation, and pricing recalibration to deal with the situation. Others, such as OpenAI and Google, are offering low-cost alternatives for processing creative workflows. While Adobe has embedded generative AI across its ecosystem—Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere Pro—via its Firefly model, there are concerns that the company has yet to effectively monetize the AI features.
On Friday, Adobe’s stock opened higher but soon lost momentum and mostly traded lower during the session. It has declined around 20% in the past six months.