Today: 3 July 2026
DocuSign Stock Rises After Earnings Beat, $2 Billion Buyback Boost and Strong 2027 Revenue Outlook
18 March 2026
2 mins read

DocuSign Stock Rises After Earnings Beat, $2 Billion Buyback Boost and Strong 2027 Revenue Outlook

SAN FRANCISCO, March 17, 2026, 15:32 PDT

DocuSign topped Wall Street’s expectations for its fiscal fourth quarter, tacked $2 billion onto its share buyback authorization, and projected revenue for the new fiscal year that outpaces consensus. Shares climbed roughly 1.5% in after-hours trading.

The timing of the update isn’t ideal for the software maker. DocuSign shares had already dropped 31% this year, dragged down by a wider selloff in software names and concerns about AI’s potential to disrupt the industry. Investors have been waiting to see if DocuSign can leverage its sizable electronic-signature user base and expand into IAM-driven agreements software.

DocuSign’s drive is centered on Intelligent Agreement Management, or IAM—its platform for drafting, signing, and handling agreements, plus extracting data from them. CEO Allan Thygesen put IAM’s annual recurring revenue above $350 million, citing the annualized value of subscription contracts. The company, he said, is “positioned to begin accelerating the business.” Reuters

For the quarter ending Jan. 31, revenue ticked up 8% to $836.9 million, with subscription revenue coming in at $819 million. Billings hit $1.02 billion, up 10%. GAAP net income came in at $90.3 million, rising from $83.5 million a year ago. Adjusted diluted earnings per share landed at $1.01, compared to $0.86 previously.

DocuSign is guiding for revenue between $822 million and $826 million in the quarter ending April 30. Looking ahead to fiscal 2027, the company expects $3.484 billion to $3.496 billion in revenue. Both projections come in ahead of analysts’ expectations—FactSet, as cited by Barron’s, had pegged the quarter at $812 million and the full year at $3.42 billion.

The company plans to swap out its preferred performance metric. From fiscal Q1 2027, billings will no longer be a headline figure; instead, management wants investors to zero in on ARR. For this year, ARR is projected to climb between 8.25% and 8.75%. IAM should account for about 18% of the total, pushing well past $600 million.

DocuSign wrapped up the quarter sitting on roughly $1.1 billion in cash, equivalents, and investments, carrying zero debt. The company bought back $269 million in shares for the period, $869 million so far in fiscal 2026, and had already snapped up another $158 million early this quarter. That leaves $2.6 billion still available under its buyback authorization.

CFO Blake Grayson pointed to “continued strong adoption” of IAM, noting first renewal cohorts were coming in above the company average. Dollar net retention ticked up to 102% from 101%. Total customers climbed 9%, topping 1.8 million, while international revenue advanced 15%. Q4 Solutions

DocuSign’s move pushes it further into software for handling agreements and workflows—beyond just e-signatures. That shift puts it up against wider document-management and digital-signature players like Adobe and OneSpan.

Even so, it’s not exactly a straightforward rebound. DocuSign projects fiscal 2027 revenue to rise at about the same pace as last year, once you factor out the positive FX impact and the digital add-on bump from the prior period. The ARR forecast? That’s leaning heavily on bookings that are backloaded, with a big push expected in the fourth quarter. First-quarter margins, meanwhile, are still set to take a hit from ongoing cloud migration costs.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • MARA Holdings Sinks 7.26% as Long Ridge Deal Moves Forward
    July 3, 2026, 2:04 PM EDT. MARA Holdings (NASDAQ:MARA) ended Thursday at $12.40, off 7.26%. Shares are down 14.7% in four days as the market pulls back. The company reported insider tax withholding of 145,540 shares at $13.89, showing a split between the transaction price and where shares finished. MARA recently announced plans to buy Long Ridge Energy & Power for around $1.5 billion, counting $785 million in debt. With the buy, MARA aims for key assets to move ahead with a planned data center campus. Long Ridge turned in positive adjusted EBITDA in Q1, a difference from MARA's larger EBITDA loss. U.S. markets are shut Friday for Independence Day, making Thursday the final trading day of the week.
Rocket Lab stock price swings as $1 billion share-sale filing dents rally
Previous Story

Rocket Lab stock price swings as $1 billion share-sale filing dents rally

Lululemon Stock Falls After Weak 2026 Outlook Overshadows Q4 Earnings Beat, Chip Bergh Joins Board
Next Story

Lululemon Stock Falls After Weak 2026 Outlook Overshadows Q4 Earnings Beat, Chip Bergh Joins Board

Go toTop