The China Mail - Adobe down 40%: Kodak moment?

USD -
AED 3.672498
AFN 68.256206
ALL 83.066274
AMD 382.490167
ANG 1.789783
AOA 916.999777
ARS 1418.987903
AUD 1.508432
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.702307
BAM 1.671367
BBD 2.013724
BDT 121.707771
BGN 1.668801
BHD 0.377022
BIF 2983.618045
BMD 1
BND 1.283398
BOB 6.909075
BRL 5.4027
BSD 0.999812
BTN 88.112288
BWP 13.398564
BYN 3.384577
BYR 19600
BZD 2.01087
CAD 1.38481
CDF 2871.000218
CHF 0.796901
CLF 0.024569
CLP 963.850506
CNY 7.121502
CNH 7.11623
COP 3925.64
CRC 504.279238
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.229093
CZK 20.80535
DJF 178.047249
DKK 6.366115
DOP 63.605599
DZD 129.742028
EGP 48.085035
ERN 15
ETB 143.851176
EUR 0.85276
FJD 2.271798
FKP 0.738995
GBP 0.73803
GEL 2.689997
GGP 0.738995
GHS 12.197915
GIP 0.738995
GMD 72.496392
GNF 8669.606385
GTQ 7.663778
GYD 209.187358
HKD 7.789715
HNL 26.199388
HRK 6.424606
HTG 130.786651
HUF 335.001981
IDR 16438.75
ILS 3.32245
IMP 0.738995
INR 88.04135
IQD 1309.883949
IRR 42074.999673
ISK 121.940167
JEP 0.738995
JMD 160.086482
JOD 0.709023
JPY 147.406019
KES 129.200622
KGS 87.449711
KHR 4006.990228
KMF 420.506379
KPW 900.013015
KRW 1386.405009
KWD 0.30543
KYD 0.833191
KZT 538.548966
LAK 21674.186492
LBP 89536.574944
LKR 301.953546
LRD 189.967527
LSL 17.573023
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.406006
MAD 9.025364
MDL 16.647582
MGA 4443.532951
MKD 52.581654
MMK 2099.458951
MNT 3597.415466
MOP 8.022133
MRU 39.984447
MUR 45.50243
MVR 15.410299
MWK 1733.720731
MXN 18.5779
MYR 4.214948
MZN 63.904195
NAD 17.573023
NGN 1507.780533
NIO 36.797758
NOK 9.882555
NPR 140.982332
NZD 1.678404
OMR 0.384496
PAB 0.999795
PEN 3.492283
PGK 4.240373
PHP 57.023495
PKR 283.817447
PLN 3.632802
PYG 7162.145995
QAR 3.645251
RON 4.327501
RSD 99.882049
RUB 84.348556
RWF 1448.812169
SAR 3.751684
SBD 8.223823
SCR 14.266967
SDG 600.999987
SEK 9.31537
SGD 1.281255
SHP 0.785843
SLE 23.37504
SLL 20969.49797
SOS 571.448104
SRD 39.374003
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.936234
SVC 8.749081
SYP 13001.736919
SZL 17.555269
THB 31.740983
TJS 9.488225
TMT 3.51
TND 2.916133
TOP 2.342101
TRY 41.28513
TTD 6.786019
TWD 30.278013
TZS 2465.000185
UAH 41.25211
UGX 3509.596486
UYU 39.934027
UZS 12353.654993
VES 154.688798
VND 26395
VUV 119.746932
WST 2.715893
XAF 560.548793
XAG 0.024285
XAU 0.000274
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802
XDR 0.697447
XOF 560.560768
XPF 101.915945
YER 239.563464
ZAR 17.477304
ZMK 9001.193009
ZMW 24.171082
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    14.87

    +1.48%

  • AZN

    -0.5400

    80.68

    -0.67%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    24.27

    +0.54%

  • GSK

    -0.3150

    40.465

    -0.78%

  • RELX

    -2.0600

    45.13

    -4.56%

  • BTI

    -0.0950

    56.165

    -0.17%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    70.41

    +0.07%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    11.71

    -1.28%

  • RIO

    0.3050

    62.175

    +0.49%

  • BCC

    0.3900

    85.68

    +0.46%

  • CMSD

    0.0390

    24.409

    +0.16%

  • BCE

    -0.0900

    24.11

    -0.37%

  • JRI

    0.1770

    13.957

    +1.27%

  • SCS

    -0.1300

    16.75

    -0.78%

  • BP

    0.5300

    34.62

    +1.53%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%


Adobe down 40%: Kodak moment?




Adobe’s stock has spent the summer trading roughly 40% below its 52-week high, a striking reversal for a company long treated as a bellwether of the creative economy. The sell-off reflects a convergence of pressures: intensifying AI-driven competition, regulatory scrutiny of subscriptions, controversial pricing changes, and a shifting center of gravity from applications to underlying AI infrastructure. The question hanging over the market is whether Adobe faces a Kodak-style disruption—or is merely navigating a bruising but temporary reset.

The slide behind the headline
As of mid-August, shares remain about 40% beneath last year’s 52-week high, underscoring how swiftly sentiment has flipped from euphoria around generative AI to worries about commoditization. The drop has also been amplified by analyst downgrades that argue value may be migrating from application-layer software to AI infrastructure and platforms.

Competitive shock: AI eats software (and design)
The rise of text-to-image and text-to-video tools has lowered creative barriers for individuals and enterprises alike. Web-first design platforms and AI-native video apps are courting Adobe’s core audience with lower prices, simpler workflows, and collaborative features that feel “good enough” for many use cases. Adobe’s aborted attempt to buy a fast-growing design rival left that competitor independent—and emboldened. Meanwhile, a separate deal created a powerful alternative bundle for creative pros by combining a mass-market design platform with a full professional suite.

Pricing, packaging and customer trust
Adobe is hiking and repackaging parts of Creative Cloud, rebranding “All Apps” to “Creative Cloud Pro” with expanded generative features. For some customers, the shift promises more AI value; for others, it reinforces “subscription fatigue” and raises the risk of churn to cheaper alternatives. Compounding the perception problem, U.S. regulators have sued Adobe over alleged “dark patterns” in subscription cancellations—claims the company denies. Regardless of the legal outcome, the episode has kept pricing and trust squarely in the headlines.

Product reality check: far from standing still
It would be a mistake to equate a falling share price with a failing product engine. Adobe continues to ship at pace: newer Firefly models add higher-fidelity image generation and expanding video features; core apps like Photoshop, Illustrator and Lightroom keep absorbing AI-assisted tooling; and the company is pushing “content credentials” and indemnities aimed at enterprises wary of copyright risk. Under the hood, the financial machine still hums: record quarterly revenue, double-digit growth in its Digital Media segment, and a large recurring-revenue base suggest substantial resilience.

Buybacks vs. disruption
Management has been retiring shares under a multi-year, $25 billion repurchase authorization—classic playbook for signaling confidence and supporting EPS. But buybacks don’t answer the existential question: if AI ultimately turns many creative tasks into commodity services, can Adobe preserve pricing power and premium margins at application level?

Is this really a “Kodak moment”?
Kodak’s mistake wasn’t missing a feature—it was clinging to a cash-cow business model while the medium itself changed. Adobe’s risk rhymes, but is not identical:

-  The bear case: If AI creation and editing consolidate into low-cost, browser-based suites and assistants embedded by cloud and OS giants, Adobe’s subscription pricing could face sustained pressure. Regulatory and reputation hits around subscriptions or data use could accelerate defections at the margin.

-  The bull case: Creative workflows remain multi-step, brand-sensitive, and quality-obsessed. Enterprises still prize compliance, provenance, and integration across design, marketing, and document ecosystems—areas where Adobe is deeply entrenched. If Firefly and Acrobat AI become indispensable “copilots,” Adobe can monetize AI inside a platform customers already trust.

-  Most likely near-term: A grind. Revenue and ARR continue to grow at a healthy clip, but multiples reflect uncertainty about long-run AI economics. Execution on pricing, retention, and enterprise AI value will decide whether this reset becomes a rerating upward—or a slow leak. Enterprise AI adoption of Firefly and Acrobat AI (features used at scale, not just trials). Regulatory outcomes in the U.S. subscription case and any spillover into practices globally.

Partner ecosystem—how deeply Adobe’s AI models integrate with (or get displaced by) hyperscaler stacks. Adobe’s 40% drawdown signals a market repricing of app-layer software in the AI era—not proof of a Kodak-style collapse. The company still has brand, distribution, and cash flow on its side. Whether that’s enough will depend less on dazzling demos and more on something prosaic: making AI raise productivity, reduce friction, and earn its keep for paying customers.