Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Software

Adobe Stock Plummets 10%, Its Second-Worst Day In Past Decade (cnbc.com) 32

Adobe shares plummeted 10% on Thursday after the software maker issued a revenue forecast for the fiscal first quarter that fell well shy of analysts' estimates. CNBC reports: The stock suffered its second-worst drop in the past decade, surpassed only by a 15% slide in mid-March of last year, when coronavirus panic rattled the markets. Adobe's three worst days of the year have come in December, pushing the stock down 16% for the month and putting it on pace for its steepest monthly decline since June 2010. Adobe said revenue in its fiscal first quarter, which goes through Feb. 2022, will be $4.23 billion, trailing analysts' predictions for revenue of $4.34 billion, according to Refinitiv. For the full year, Adobe expects sales of $17.9 billion, which is below analysts' average estimate for revenue of $18.16 billion.

In the fourth quarter, Adobe said revenue climbed 20% to $4.11 billion, which beat estimates, led by 21% growth in the company's digital media segment. However, inflation and concerns about interest rates have led investors to put 2021 behind them and focus more on the coming year. That's drawn them out of high-growth, high-multiple stocks and into sectors that are generally viewed as more resistant to inflationary pressures and rate hikes. [...] Adobe fell $64.24 to $566.09 at the close. The stock is down 19% from its 52-week high last month.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Adobe Stock Plummets 10%, Its Second-Worst Day In Past Decade

Comments Filter:
  • Once Adobe moved to subscription licensing they knew they could really get a good revenue stream from people. After all, why pay once when you can keep paying year after year?

    However, with the (slow) rise of competitors whose products can do pretty much the same thing (except for Photoshop), people are wising up and getting off the "bleed them dry" merry go round.

    With a little more effort, Adobe's products can become less used which will really put a hurt on their revenue and earnings.

    • by jddj ( 1085169 ) on Friday December 17, 2021 @06:24PM (#62092379) Journal

      Serif's Affinity Photo, Designer and Publisher products are pretty good replacements, purchasable, and affordable.

      It's almost as though Serif is paying attention to its business.

      • Affinity is what I use. I dropped Adobe about 3 years ago. They are capable Adobe replacements. However for technical diagrams, I still have to resort to Visio when I want to use my library of scripted up smart shapes. I'm waiting for some other product (preferably Affinity Designer) to effectively copy Visio smart shapes. It's not like they're still patented or anything. They've been in Visio for a long time.

        • I realize you're probably on a PC, but Omnigraffle is a great Visio alternative on MacOS. Lots of community template support, too.

          • I have a Mac laptop and a desktop PC. I use affinity on both. I have Omnigraffle, but never really got along with it. Perhaps I should give it another go.

            • It uses the stupid Apple "always save and revert if you didn't mean that" document model (like an iphone, for fucks sale), but otherwise hard to fault it.

              I've done program flows, and a wall-sized highly-detailed journey map with it. It's really good, but you kind of have to have a project on deadline to bond with it, I think.

              It's got infinite canvas, which I really like (you can limit the canvas if you want to). It's got automated connecting lines, starter templates, online templates, all the stuff you'd ex

              • I just took a look and I can't find a way to script objects.

                My visio library has arrows for bus and signal diagrams that you can stretch while not deforming the arrowheads and the bus arrows can abut as a t-junction and the crossing line gets erased automatically and it all stays on grid. I have a timing diagram library with edges you can drag around with text inserts that fit with the trace height. I have a library of electrical and logic symbols with configurable ports.

                It looks like Omnigraffle cannot do

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )
      Things just keep chiseling Adobe down. Flash is gone. They're charging so much for Coldfusion that open source alternatives, starting with Railo, OpenBD, and now Lucee are going to put Adobe Coldfusion out of business. Photoshop may be great, but once designers learn to deal with some limitations of OSS in exchange for some functionality, that goes as well. Like I said, Adobe is getting gnawed at.
    • Almost everything artists want to do with Photoshop is done and faster with Krita. Artists buy/rent/steal for exactly one reason: lock-in. Not because it's a great way to make art.

      • Almost everything artists want to do with Photoshop is done and faster with Krita. Artists buy/rent/steal for exactly one reason: lock-in. Not because it's a great way to make art.

        Then artist's won't mind when we steal their work.

  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Friday December 17, 2021 @05:58PM (#62092313)

    Adobe seems to be in full zombie mode. I don't want a subscription and I don't want Adobe's cloud - so Adobe has nothing to offer me.

    • I avoid cloud-crap as well if I can.

      And there are so many Adobe alternatives (I'm talking about Photoshop here) out there that are free, cheaper, and aren't cloud-connected subscription programs.

      I loved Lightroom but the non-cloud version doesn't work on my M1 Mac. I haven't found an alternative that I like yet, which kinda sucks.

      Most home & casual users that run Windows would be completely satisfied with the editing capabilities of Paint.net. It has layers and many of the basic and most useful tools t

  • by thegreatbob ( 693104 ) on Friday December 17, 2021 @06:04PM (#62092325) Journal
    That looks like it really hurt, Bob. Now on to sports.
  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Friday December 17, 2021 @06:04PM (#62092327) Homepage
    For now, Photoshop and Premier 5.5 will do.
    • I call it nosebleed software,because they charge you more, but it is adding zero value to the business, just another parasite cost like insurance and business taxes. IBM, Oracle, SAP are other bushranger/vampire vendors feeling blowback. Many reject software that was one product now split up to a dozen sub products that also wants to 'host' your work/designs. Other alternatives are to buy used software from Germany or Switzerland where there is nothing grey about first doctrine, where Adobe was the last h
    • Ditto. I'll continue to use CS6 for as long as I can then I'll switch to Pixelmator Pro. Paying for hours I'm not using Photoshop is like owning a horse or a boat. You have to keep paying when you're not using them. I would be happy to pay $300 for the current version of Photoshop. I don't feel sorry for Adobe. They chose a bad business model for my semi-pro needs.
  • When many stock traders were in a head to head trading combat needing to make QUICK decisions on a seconds to one minute time scale, in a situation fighting for many billions of pennies against skynet's bot army, many needed to open, view, search and compare PDFs QUICKLY to gather information for their crucial next move,

    when they realized that there is nothing to be done QUICKLY with ADOBE ACROBAT (PRO)

    and in the end losing many billions of pennies due to the utter lack of performance when using Adobe Acro

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

Working...