Adobe's stock is down 60% from its 2024 high, and the company's response is to spend $25 billion buying it back. The board authorized the new share repurchase program on Monday with a window running through April 2030, giving Adobe four years to deploy the authorization and a clear signal to investors that management believes the shares are meaningfully undervalued at current prices.
The news pushed the stock up 3.5% on the day.
The Problem Adobe Is Trying To Solve
The concern hanging over every Adobe earnings call is AI. Investors worry that tools like OpenAI's image generation, Midjourney, and a growing list of AI-native design platforms will eat into Adobe's core products like Photoshop, Illustrator, and Premiere.
The stock price reflects those fears - Adobe is down about 29% year to date in 2026 and down roughly 60% from its 2024 peak. The underlying business, though, is not broken.
Q1 fiscal 2026 revenue came in at $6.40 billion, a company record, up 12% year over year. Operating cash flow - the cash a business generates from its core operations - also set a record at $2.96 billion.
Cash is flowing in. The stock price just isn't following.
How A Buyback Works And Why It Helps
A share buyback shrinks the pool of shares outstanding. Fewer shares spread across the same total profits means higher earnings per share, which often lifts the price over time.
Buybacks also return capital to shareholders without the commitment of a dividend, giving management flexibility to scale the pace of repurchases up or down based on market conditions. CFO Dan Durn said the new buyback "reflects strong confidence in its cash generation and long-term shareholder value." In plain English: Adobe thinks the market is too pessimistic on the stock and plans to vote with its own wallet at what management believes are attractive prices.
The $25 billion authorization runs through April 30, 2030, which means Adobe can pace the execution over multiple years. That flexibility is valuable because it lets management buy more aggressively when shares are weak and pull back when prices recover.
The Catch Every Investor Should Know
Buybacks don't solve Adobe's bigger question about AI. If the company's core subscription products do get pressured by new entrants, a smaller share count won't fix the underlying earnings problem.
The buyback buys Adobe time. It doesn't answer whether Photoshop and Creative Cloud can stay dominant in a design software market where AI is lowering the barrier for new competitors.
Adobe's own AI products, including Firefly and generative features inside its existing tools, are part of the company's defense. But investors remain split on whether Adobe can charge enough for AI features to offset any subscription pressure from cheaper or AI-native alternatives.
Bottom line: The buyback is a signal of confidence, not a fix for the core competitive question. Investors need both to work for the stock to recover durably.
What To Watch
Netflix authorized a $25 billion buyback the same week under similar circumstances - a beaten-down stock, strong cash generation, and management betting the market is too bearish.
Two of the largest tech names running the same play in the same week tells you something about where boardrooms see the best use of capital right now. For Adobe specifically, watch how quickly the company deploys the authorization and whether upcoming product launches translate into renewed revenue growth.
A buyback works best when it's paired with underlying business momentum. Without that, it's a holding pattern at best.
