NEW YORK, June 6, 2026, 16:06 (EDT)
Adobe Inc. (ADBE) slid 2.7% to $251.44 on Friday, with shares now down about 40% from the 52-week high. The Photoshop and Acrobat parent dropped during a wider selloff, but still looked soft before its next major event.
Thursday’s the day. Adobe will put out its fiscal Q2 numbers after the close on June 11, then hold an investor call from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Pacific, the company said. With Nasdaq closed for the weekend, traders won’t get to adjust before that report until Monday’s open.
The tape didn’t help. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 4.2% on Friday and finished the week down 4.7%. The S&P 500 fell 2.6% Friday after a stronger U.S. jobs report sent bond yields up and put the Fed outlook back in focus. Growth stocks lag in that setup.
Adobe shares saw a volatile week. The stock surged 5.7% on Monday to close at $274.03, but then slid for the rest of the week, finishing Friday at $251.44. That’s about a 3% decline from the previous Friday’s $259.21 close. Measured from Monday’s finish, shares dropped around 8%.
Traders in the options market are pricing in a bigger move for Adobe. Based on Bloomberg options data, Adobe shares could shift 8.7% around its June 11 earnings release, according to . The implied move is derived from the prices of Adobe’s options and signals expected volatility, not a bet on the direction.
Adobe last called for fiscal Q2 revenue between $6.43 billion and $6.48 billion and non-GAAP EPS from $5.80 to $5.85. Non-GAAP earnings don’t include certain costs. Annualized recurring revenue, or ARR, is a subscription run rate. CEO Shantanu Narayen in March said “AI-first ARR more than tripling year over year.” CFO Dan Durn noted “record Q1 cash flow of $2.96 billion.” Business Wire
Investors may not be ready to buy the AI pitch just yet. Mizuho’s Gregg Moskowitz, who downgraded Adobe to Neutral from Outperform, cited “intensifying competition in the prosumer/SMB segments”—that’s advanced users and smaller businesses. He expects Adobe’s organic revenue to grow in the high single digits “at best” over the next two or three years, Kiplinger reported. Kiplinger
Canva and Figma are key here. Reuters said in March both these AI-first competitors were picking up steam with generative image, video and editing tools for marketers and content creators—the same crowd Adobe hopes won’t leave its ecosystem.
Leadership questions are still open. Adobe said in March that CEO Shantanu Narayen will step down once a replacement is found but stay on as chair. Lead independent director Frank Calderoni called Narayen the “architect of Adobe’s transformation.” Now the board says it’s searching for what it calls the right leader for the next chapter. Adobe Newsroom
Adobe is looking to shore up sentiment after the board in April signed off on up to $25 billion in share buybacks through April 2030. Durn said the move was a “direct expression of confidence in our robust cash flow,” a message pitched to investors concerned by Adobe’s heavy spending on AI with unclear returns. Business Wire
The risk goes both ways. If Adobe posts weak guidance, slow paid adoption of Firefly and its AI, or margin pressure from higher product and computing costs, the buyback might look like a defensive move. The bear case is simple: Adobe hangs onto its large customers, but cheaper AI rivals chip away at the rest, dragging on growth and hitting the valuation.
Looking to next week, the stock’s real test isn’t another product pitch. It’s evidence. Investors want numbers on AI features driving stable revenue, want assurance that subscriptions are still holding up, and answers from management on the CEO handoff that don’t add confusion. If those don’t show up, Friday’s close may not be the bottom.