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Started By
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ADBE a buy-low candidate?
Posted on 1/23/26 at 2:38 pm
Posted on 1/23/26 at 2:38 pm
ADBE popped up on a recent stock screen I ran yesterday and I noticed it’s basically sitting near 5 year lows. Some key financial metrics look fairly good:
- PE of 17
- price/book of 10.5
- ROE at 55%
- Op Margin - 37%
- Revenue growth leaves a little to be desired but is in line with the average for the sector and competitors
Does the MB own ADBE or feel like this is a good L/T entry point? Any thoughts are appreciated!
- PE of 17
- price/book of 10.5
- ROE at 55%
- Op Margin - 37%
- Revenue growth leaves a little to be desired but is in line with the average for the sector and competitors
Does the MB own ADBE or feel like this is a good L/T entry point? Any thoughts are appreciated!
Posted on 1/23/26 at 2:46 pm to skewbs
I added ADBE recently. I think the AI disruption fear is way overblown, especially for a mature company with such a strong balance sheet. They’re buying back a ton of shares at 5 year lows too. This stock’s rebound just feels ripe.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 3:10 pm to CecilShortsHisPants
I’ve been watching it for several months, but it’s just been sliding steadily. The 50 and 200 DMA are still trending down, but the RSI is attractive for entry.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 3:28 pm to skewbs
I’m a customer but not a buyer. Adobe’s growth has always been the result of purchasing competitors and monopolizing the creatives market. That spigot closed after figma.
The more pressing issue is the tools on an iPhone are now easier to use, free, and more than adequate for most.
That’s a tough market to grow when you operate the most expensive subscription plans on the market. Not to mention decades of ill will from their user base that only EA could rival.
The more pressing issue is the tools on an iPhone are now easier to use, free, and more than adequate for most.
That’s a tough market to grow when you operate the most expensive subscription plans on the market. Not to mention decades of ill will from their user base that only EA could rival.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 3:39 pm to CecilShortsHisPants
I'll stay away. I'm afraid their greedy subscription model is on thin ice now. I quit them as a customer two years ago. Thought I couldn't do without. Wrong.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 5:32 pm to ynlvr
quote:
I'll stay away. I'm afraid their greedy subscription model is on thin ice now. I quit them as a customer two years ago. Thought I couldn't do without. Wrong.
Agree so many tools that can do what their subscription service does these days.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 7:21 pm to lsuconnman
Fair points as a user. In my research I think they’re considering moving from a subscription based pricing model to an outcome based pricing model.
Might be really appealing. Then you’re paying for usage, not a license that is a static cost whether you use it or not. If this happens it will be interesting to see how, or if, the market reacts.
Might be really appealing. Then you’re paying for usage, not a license that is a static cost whether you use it or not. If this happens it will be interesting to see how, or if, the market reacts.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 7:33 pm to skewbs
Nah
This is one of the software areas most ripe to be replaced by AI. There are better opportunities
This is one of the software areas most ripe to be replaced by AI. There are better opportunities
Posted on 1/23/26 at 8:41 pm to skewbs
quote:
Fair points as a user. In my research I think they’re considering moving from a subscription based pricing model to an outcome based pricing model.
I find that hard to believe. CS4 was like $1500 a license before they went to a subscription, and that was 20 years ago.
Honestly, they’ve managed the subscription model far better than anyone expected. Nonetheless, I doubt there’s a large market waiting for Adobe to change from $70/mo to a $5000 license.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 10:25 am to Upperdecker
quote:
This is one of the software areas most ripe to be replaced by AI
Yes, which is why the stock has been under pressure. No one seems to acknowledge they’ve rolled out an entire lineup of AI products. They’re getting ahead of it. I think the real risk is product pricing from competition. The value play here is that they can find a way to keep market share by differentiating their superior products. Latest annual earnings release was very solid.
This post was edited on 1/24/26 at 10:27 am
Posted on 1/24/26 at 11:21 am to skewbs
quote:
This is one of the software areas most ripe to be replaced by AI
What’s overlooked is their market is professionals. Most commercial outlets prohibit AI manipulation.
Getty constantly flags submissions for AI manipulation and they routinely send reminders that such submissions can result in contract cancellations.
Given their access to subscribers content, AI development is a no brainer. How they monetize that effort remains to be seen.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 12:56 pm to ynlvr
Have you found a comparable program that's as good at video stabilization?
Posted on 1/24/26 at 2:21 pm to FAT SEXY
Unfortunately nothing as robust. I’ve just dialed back my expectations and needs.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 3:14 pm to ynlvr
That's the main tool I liked on their programs. It was a miracle worker at times.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 4:56 am to skewbs
I've never liked the company, their business practices and only use their products reluctantly when there is no other alternative. Their products, when I'm forced to use them, are inconvenient and have many of the characteristics of malware.


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