Adobe kicked off its annual Summit conference with a headline launch: CX Enterprise, a new AI agent platform built for large businesses. The timing is deliberate — the company is under pressure to show it can compete in an AI-first world, not just survive it.
Adobe Inc., ADBE
CX Enterprise is designed to help companies improve customer experience, drive sales, and cut down on time-heavy manual tasks. Its flagship offering, CX Enterprise Coworker, can automatically execute tasks and coordinate multiple AI agents based on a company’s business goals.
The launch didn’t happen in isolation. Adobe also announced expanded partnerships with some of the biggest names in AI — Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Google Cloud, IBM, Microsoft, Nvidia, and OpenAI. That’s a broad coalition.
ADBE stock rose 1.8% to $248.99 on Monday. The S&P 500 fell 0.2% and the Nasdaq dropped 0.4%, so Adobe was clearly moving against the grain.
Despite Monday’s gain, the stock is still down 30% in 2025 as of Friday’s close. That decline reflects a real anxiety in the market: will AI tools erode demand for traditional software?
RBC Capital lowered its price target on ADBE to $350 from $400 on April 16, citing multiple compression across peer companies. It kept its Outperform rating, expecting management to lean into Adobe’s ecosystem strength at the Summit.
RBC also noted that investors are still waiting for a re-acceleration in annual recurring revenue — and that return on investment from generative AI tools will be a key theme at the event.
BTIG took a cooler view. Analyst Nick Altmann initiated coverage on April 12 with a Neutral rating and no price target. The firm cited uncertainty around how AI will reshape the creative market long-term, flagging concerns about Adobe’s revenue and margin outlook.
Earlier this month, on April 14, Adobe introduced the Firefly AI Assistant. It lets users describe what they want in plain language, and the tool executes multi-step workflows across Creative Cloud apps — Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Illustrator, and others.
The assistant is designed to unify Adobe’s creative suite under a single, conversational interface. It’s a different approach from CX Enterprise, targeting individual creators rather than enterprise operations teams.
AI agents haven’t been a magic fix for legacy software companies broadly. Salesforce, for example, is also down roughly 30% this year — even as annual recurring revenue from its Agentforce platform jumped 82% to $800 million over the past six months.
Adobe’s CX Enterprise platform is now available. The company has not provided specific revenue guidance tied to the new platform’s launch.
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