In This Article:
Adobe (ADBE) reported fourth-quarter results beat Wall Street estimates on both the top and bottom lines, but the stock is falling in after-hours trading due to disappointing full-year guidance. For the most recent quarter, Adobe reported adjusted earnings of $4.27 per share compared to estimates of $4.14 per share and revenue of $5.05 billion, just slightly better than the $5.02 billion analysts were expecting.
Jefferies Senior Analyst Brent Thill is shrugging off the guidance, even though it fell short of estimates. He thinks Adobe executives are being conservative with their outlook. Thill argues that when it comes to AI, Adobe is "ahead of everyone else," saying the company's AI software Firefly is "crushing it." "It is truly a product that is changing creatives' lives," Thill says.
Click here to watch the full interview on the Yahoo Finance YouTube page or you can watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live here.
Video Transcript
JULIE HYMAN: Let's talk about Adobe earnings right now. The shares are under pressure after reported earnings moments ago. The shares are down almost 6%. The results for last quarter did beat on the top and bottom line, but the company's guidance is falling short of what analysts had predicted here.
The company saying adjusted earnings per share for 2024 will be $17.60 to $18. The estimate was $18, so there's room for them to miss estimates here. It looks like revenue overall, the forecast is below what analysts had predicted. And in particular, whether you're looking at their digital media revenue, which is the bigger part of their business or digital experience revenue, both of those leave room to miss estimates.
One more thing I just want to mention here that I'm still, sort of, trying to figure out, the company said it got a communication from the Federal Trade Commission in November about its subscriptions. It's unclear to me exactly what that entails here, but the company says at some point that that could have-- there could be a monetary penalty related to that. So let's piece through all of this and bring in Brent Thill, senior analyst at Jefferies. Brent, it's good to see you. Why don't you first just give us your first blush reaction here to these Adobe numbers, and in particular, that forecast?
BRENT THILL: Yeah. Thanks for having me. The quarter was fine. The guide was below an ARR, total revenue and earnings. So all three metrics were below the street and this is pretty classic.
I mean, Adobe's guiding out a whole year. I mean, think about Google, they don't even give you one quarter of guidance. So the CFO has been pretty conservative. They've been in a beat and raise cadence.