The Case For Adobe After The Figma Acquisition

 | Sep 20, 2022 04:13

  • Shares of Adobe plunged last week amid mixed earnings and, most notably, the $20-billion acquisition of Figma
  • The Figma deal raises fears Adobe’s competitive position is weakening
  • But the deal may be better than investors realize; and below $300 ADBE looks like a long-term buy
  • Last Thursday morning, Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE) announced it was buying Figma for $20 billion. Over the next two trading sessions, Adobe’s market capitalization declined $34 billion.

    That seemingly wonky math could be explained by several factors:

    • Adobe overpaid in acquiring Figma at close to 50 times its year-end ARR (annual recurring revenue);
    • Adobe’s fiscal third-quarter earnings report were mixed, and on their own probably would have driven some downside in ADBE stock;
    • Perhaps most importantly, the decision to overpay for Figma highlights the external threats to Adobe’s business. Crucially, it is an admission from Adobe management itself about the risk posed by those threats.

    In that telling, the decline makes some sense. So does the fact that ADBE lost 24% for the week, and trades not only at a 29-month low, but 9% below where it did at the beginning of 2020.

    That may not be the right way to view this story. The Figma deal appears more logical, and (possibly) less of an overpay, than the initial reaction suggests. The company's Q3 earnings and Q4 guidance were mixed, but not nearly enough to drive an epic sell-off. And with ADBE now trading at a suddenly reasonable valuation, there’s a solid case that last week’s plunge is an opportunity.