Adobe Shares Remain Depressed After Two-Year Slump, Reviving Fortunes Falls to New Leadership

Deep News
Mar 13

Software giant Adobe saw its shares plunge 6.7% early Friday after the company announced that current CEO Shantanu Narayen will step down once a successor is identified. This development overshadowed the positive news of quarterly results that exceeded analyst expectations.

Adobe has struggled to convince investors to support its stock. The question now is whether a new CEO can win back their confidence. Reviving investor interest in the shares of this once high-flying software company will soon become the task of new leadership. Adobe stated on Thursday that Shantanu Narayen, CEO for 18 years, plans to retire, with the transition to occur once a replacement is found.

The leadership announcement is significant as Adobe's stock has been under pressure due to concerns about increasing competition and the impact of artificial intelligence on its business. In the short term, leadership uncertainty may not help its situation.

The news comes as Adobe's multi-year stock decline continues. The owner of Photoshop and Illustrator saw its shares fall more than 7% in after-hours trading following the earnings report, despite quarterly results surpassing expectations.

For its first fiscal quarter ended in March, Adobe reported adjusted earnings per share of $6.06 and revenue of $6.40 billion, a record that represents 12% year-over-year growth. Both figures exceeded analyst estimates compiled by Visible Alpha.

The company provided second-quarter guidance for earnings per share between $5.80 and $5.85 and revenue in the range of $6.43 billion to $6.48 billion, which also surpassed consensus market expectations.

Concerns that artificial intelligence could disrupt Adobe's software business, along with others in the sector, have been a drag on its stock price, contributing to a prolonged downturn. Adobe shares have declined approximately 28% year-to-date in 2026, extending a slump from the past two years. The stock is down about 60% from its peak in 2024.

"The announcement of a CEO change adds another layer of uncertainty to a delicate story," wrote Citigroup analysts on Thursday.

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