Company Overview

Last Thursday night, Adobe delivered one of the stronger software earnings reports of the season — and the market punished it anyway. Q2 FY2026 revenue hit a record $6.62 billion, AI-first ARR tripled year-over-year and crossed the $500 million threshold, and management raised both full-year revenue and EPS guidance — the combination that typically produces a relief rally for a stock that had been down 30% year-to-date. Instead, ADBE shares fell approximately 5.5% in after-hours trading on June 11, primarily because CFO Dan Durn’s surprise departure — effective today, June 15 — added a second top-level leadership vacancy alongside an ongoing CEO search.

That leadership noise created a gap between what the business actually reported and what the stock price did. This morning, analyst A.J. Button upgraded Adobe to Buy, describing the post-earnings selloff as having created a favorable buying opportunity following a robust earnings beat and guidance increase. The core question for Tuesday’s readers is whether the CFO departure — a real but ultimately leadership-level event — has overshadowed fundamental results that confirm Adobe’s AI transition is actually working. Revenue of $6.62 billion grew 11% year-over-year, non-GAAP EPS of $5.96 grew 18%, and AI-driven products are fueling material new growth — not just pilot programs. When the narrative and the numbers diverge this visibly, it tends to be worth a closer look.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

Record Revenue + Guidance Raise → The Print the Market Ignored
Adobe reported record Q2 revenue of $6.62 billion, up 11% year-over-year, with non-GAAP EPS of $5.96 growing 18% year-over-year. Management raised full-year FY2026 revenue guidance to $26.5–$26.6 billion and raised full-year non-GAAP EPS targets, with both figures exceeding prior Wall Street expectations. Q3 guidance called for non-GAAP EPS of $6.05–$6.10 on revenue of $6.67–$6.72 billion — continuing the sequential growth trajectory. A record revenue quarter with a guidance raise, in a stock already down 30% for the year, is not the profile of a business in secular decline.

AI-First ARR Tripled → Crossed $500 Million, Firefly at ~$300 Million
AI-first ARR tripled year-over-year and crossed the $500 million threshold — the metric that answers the core question of whether Adobe’s AI strategy is generating real revenue or just user activity. Firefly ending ARR approached $300 million, growing approximately 50% quarter-over-quarter via Firefly apps and credit packs. Acrobat AI Assistant saw ARR triple, Firefly asset generation surged 4x, and GenStudio ARR grew over 25% year-over-year. These are not engagement metrics — they are revenue metrics, and their trajectory answers the market’s central worry about Adobe directly.

850 Million MAU → Freemium Flywheel Building
Monthly active users surpassed 850 million, expanding approximately 20% year-over-year, with Creative Freemium MAU reaching 90 million, up from 50 million — a 70%+ year-over-year increase. Management deliberately chose to expand this freemium funnel in H2, deferring some near-term Creative Cloud pricing optimization to maximize the long-term monetization opportunity. Enterprise customers with over $10 million in ARR grew greater than 20% year-over-year, and retention across the enterprise customer base remained strong. The scale of the user base — 850 million monthly actives — is an asset that very few software companies possess.

Today’s Buy Upgrade → Post-Earnings Selloff Called a Buying Opportunity
On June 15, Adobe received a Buy rating upgrade from analyst A.J. Button following the earnings beat and guidance increase, with Button describing the post-earnings selloff as having created a favorable buying opportunity. The current P/E ratio of 11.95 indicates a potentially undervalued stock — a valuation that, if accurate, would represent one of the cheapest entries in Adobe’s publicly-traded history relative to its earnings trajectory. A software company growing EPS 18% year-over-year trading at under 12x earnings is a combination that institutional investors tend to notice eventually.

CFO Departure → Real Overhang, But Separate From the Business
CFO Dan Durn is leaving Adobe effective today to join Marvell Technologies, adding a second top-level leadership vacancy alongside the ongoing CEO search. This is a genuine near-term overhang — institutional investors are cautious about companies operating without permanent senior leadership, and the coincidence of both CEO and CFO transitions creates uncertainty about strategic continuity. Interim CFO Steven Day has been named, and the CEO search is noted as progressing well. The risk is real. The question is whether it changes the fundamental trajectory of a business that just posted record revenue and tripled its AI recurring revenue — and the upgrade this morning argues that the selloff has overweighted leadership uncertainty relative to business performance.

Market Takeaway

Adobe’s post-earnings selloff is the kind of market reaction that deserves a second look. The business delivered record revenue, tripled AI-first ARR past $500 million, raised full-year guidance, and showed 850 million monthly active users expanding at 20% — a fundamental picture that is meaningfully better than what most investors feared heading into the print. The stock fell because the CFO announced his departure the same night. That’s a legitimate concern, but it’s a different concern than the one the market has been pricing all year — namely, that AI would destroy Adobe’s business model rather than fuel it.

The results from Thursday answered the AI disruption question more definitively than any prior quarter. AI-first ARR tripling to over $500 million means that Adobe is not just surviving the generative AI era — it is monetizing it directly. The freemium strategy management outlined for H2, which deliberately trades near-term ARR growth for massive MAU expansion, is a long-game move: 90 million Creative Freemium users represents the largest top-of-funnel Adobe has ever had for converting casual users into paid subscribers. The risks remain genuine — dual leadership vacancies create strategic uncertainty, the H2 freemium pivot means near-term ARR growth will moderate by design, and the competitive landscape from Canva, OpenAI, and Anthropic’s Claude Design hasn’t softened. But for traders watching Tuesday’s session with a fresh Buy upgrade on the tape and the stock trading at under 12x earnings after a record quarter, the question worth asking is whether Thursday’s selloff was a reaction to the CFO news or an opportunity dressed up as one.