Earnings

Adobe lifts profit forecast for fiscal 2023 and beats estimates on quarterly results

Products You May Like

In this article

  • ADBE
Shantanu Narayen, CEO of Adobe, attends a media event in Mumbai on May 3, 2017.
Abhijit Bhatlekar | Mint | Hindustan Times | Getty Images

Adobe shares rose 5% in extended trading on Wednesday after software maker announced fiscal first-quarter results that topped Wall Street estimates and lifted its full-year foercast.

Here’s how the company did:

  • Earnings: $3.80 per share, adjusted, vs. $3.68 per share as expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv.
  • Revenue: $4.66 billion, vs. $4.62 billion as expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv.

Revenue rose 9% year over year in the quarter that ended March 3, according to a statement. Net income fell slightly to $1.25 billion.

The company’s Digital Media segment, which includes the Creative Cloud design software bundle, generated $3.4 billion in revenue, up 9% from a year and above the $3.36 billion consensus among analysts polled by StreetAccount.

Adobe’s Digital Experience segment, which features Marketo marketing software, contributed $1.18 billion in revenue, just above the $1.17 billion StreetAccount consensus.

For the second quarter, Adobe expects earnings per share of $3.75 to $3.80 on an adjusted basis and $4.75 billion to $4.78 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had been expecting $3.76 per share in adjusted earnings and $4.76 billion in revenue.

Adobe bumped up its profit forecast for the 2023 fiscal year, and now sees $15.30 to $15.60 in adjusted earnings per share, with $1.7 billion in net new annualized recurring revenue from Digital Media. In December Adobe said it was looking for $15.15 to $15.45 in adjusted earnings per share for the full year, with $1.65 billion in net-new Digital Media ARR. Analysts polled by Refinitiv were looking for $15.31 in adjusted earnings per share.

One recent acquisition is bearing fruit at Adobe. The company is getting existing video clients to pay for Frame.io, a tool for reviewing and approving videos that it acquired for $1.24 billion in 2021, Dan Durn, Adobe’s finance chief, said on a conference call with analysts.

And in the quarter Adobe beat out “single-product competitors” in categories such as analytics and content management for some deals, said Anil Chakravarthy, president of the Digital Experience unit.

During the quarter, Microsoft said it was embedding Adobe’s Acrobat PDF engine into Edge, the default browser in Windows 10 and 11, and Adobe said it’s been engaging with regulators in the U.S., U.K. and EU on its pending $20 billion acquisition of design software startup Figma. “We have completed the discovery phase of the U.S. DOJ second request and are prepared for next steps, whether that is an approval or a challenge,” Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen said on the conference call.

Excluding the after-hours move, Adobe shares have declined 1% so far this year, while the S&P 500 index has risen 1%.

WATCH: Adobe is a company we have admired for a really long time, says Oakmark’s Bill Nygren

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Here’s why tax-loss harvesting can be easier with exchange-traded funds
Personal luxury goods market to shrink for first time since the 2008 financial crash, research finds
Family offices becoming ‘economic powerhouse’ in private company deals
Fed’s Kashkari says Trump tariffs could reheat inflation if they provoke global trade ’tit for tat’
Megacap tech stocks make some room — here is where investors are branching out