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Adobe Inc. — Through the Warren Buffett Lens

Ticker: ADBE · Lens: Warren Buffett · Created: 2026-06-25

Thesis

Adobe operates a durable, habit-based moat around digital creativity and document productivity. Its subscription model generates predictable, recurring owner earnings that convert strongly into free cash flow. The business requires little tangible capital, earns high returns on equity, and is managed with a shareholder-oriented capital allocation discipline—aggressive buybacks, no dividend, and tuck-in M&A. The emerging AI layer (Firefly, AI Assistant) is being integrated into existing workflows, which should widen the moat by raising switching costs and expanding the user base. The key number is normalized owner earnings: roughly $7–8 billion annually, growing with the subscription base. At the current price, the owner earnings yield is modest, so the margin of safety depends on sustained compounding. The thesis works if Adobe remains the default creative infrastructure for professionals and knowledge workers for the next decade. Supporting evidence: • Subscription revenue grew 13% YoY in Q1 FY2026 to $6.20 billion, and Total Adobe ARR reached $26.06 billion, up 10.9% YoY (Source 1, Source 2). • Free cash flow generation is robust: FY2025 operating cash flow was $10.03 billion against capex of only $360 million, implying high owner earnings conversion (Source 6, Historical Fundamentals). • Capital allocation is shareholder-friendly: $4.40 billion in buybacks in FY2025, reducing shares outstanding from 479M to 441M over five years, with a $25 billion repurchase authorization in place (Source 3, Historical Fundamentals). Key uncertainties: • Can Adobe maintain pricing power and ARPU growth as it expands the freemium funnel and defers near-term ARR optimization, or will the mix shift toward lower-monetization users? • Will AI-first ARR ($500M+) prove incremental and margin-accretive, or will it cannibalize existing Creative Cloud subscriptions and compress long-term margins? Management & culture: Shantanu Narayen has been CEO since 2007, steering Adobe through the transition from perpetual licenses to subscriptions—a textbook example of rational, long-term capital allocation. The culture emphasizes product innovation and customer retention over promotional growth. The recent appointment of an interim CFO (Steven Day) introduces some uncertainty, but the finance function appears deep. Management communicates in plain English, avoids aggressive adjusted metrics, and ties compensation to subscription revenue and ARR growth. The board has authorized massive buybacks, signaling confidence in intrinsic value. The decision to combine segments into a single reporting unit is a minor transparency negative, but the underlying economics remain visible through ARR and cash flow. Overall, this is an owner-oriented management team with a strong track record of compounding per-share value.

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