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Markets Edge · Intelligence Desk MACALLAN 1926

Adobe Authorizes $25 Billion Buyback as Enterprise Software Margins Stabilize

The largest repurchase program in Adobe's history signals management confidence amid AI transition skepticism.

Published April 24, 2026 Source The Motley Fool From the chopped neck
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MACALLAN 1926 · April 24, 2026

Adobe Authorizes $25 Billion Buyback as Enterprise Software Margins Stabilize

The largest repurchase program in Adobe's history signals management confidence amid AI transition skepticism.

Adobe authorized a $25 billion share repurchase program on January 16, 2025, the largest in company history and nearly double the $15 billion program announced in December 2022. The move arrives as the enterprise software maker trades at $442 per share, roughly 18% below its September 2024 peak, despite record operating cash flow approaching $8.5 billion annually.

The authorization replaces all prior buyback capacity. Adobe repurchased $5 billion in fiscal 2024 and $4 billion the prior year, averaging a 1.2% annual reduction in share count. At current pace and valuation, the new program funds four to five years of similar activity, though management retains discretion to accelerate during periods of perceived undervaluation. The company generated $2.1 billion in free cash flow in Q4 2024 alone, up 14% year-over-year, creating flexibility for both repurchases and the $4.68 billion annual dividend commitment.

The timing matters. Adobe faces investor concern over generative AI cannibalization of Creative Cloud subscriptions, particularly among individual creators who might shift to lower-cost AI-native tools. The stock trades at 22.3x forward earnings, a 15% discount to its five-year average multiple, despite Document Cloud revenue accelerating to 18% growth and enterprise Creative Cloud retention rates holding above 95%. Management is using excess capital to buy stock at a valuation they publicly describe as disconnected from fundamentals. The implicit message: the AI threat is priced, the margin structure is intact, and the enterprise moat remains underappreciated.

This also reflects a broader shift in enterprise software capital allocation. Since late 2022, eleven of the fifteen largest SaaS companies have either initiated or materially expanded buyback authorizations, even as aggregate revenue growth decelerated from mid-teens to high-single-digits. The playbook is consistent—use durable cash generation to offset valuation compression and signal that the margin profile built during the 2020-2021 spending surge is permanent, not cyclical. Adobe's free cash flow margin sits at 31%, among the highest in infrastructure software, and the company has guided to sustained margin expansion through fiscal 2026.

Allocators should track three follow-on events. First, Adobe's March earnings call will clarify execution pace—whether buybacks occur evenly or concentrate during trading windows. Second, Firefly AI monetization metrics, expected in the April product update, determine whether Creative Cloud average revenue per user stabilizes or continues compressing. Third, enterprise Document Cloud pipeline commentary in May will show whether the $3.6 billion Acrobat business can sustain mid-teens growth without material pricing concessions.

The authorization expires in December 2027. At $442 per share and 56.5 million shares repurchased at current pace, Adobe removes roughly $25 billion in equity value over thirty-three months—2.3% of market cap quarterly if executed mechanically, 4-5% if concentrated during weakness.

The takeaway
Adobe's **$25B** buyback signals management sees enterprise AI concerns as overpriced; watch March call for execution tempo.
adobebuybackenterprise softwarecapital allocationsaascreative cloud
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