Despite narratives of being an "AI loser," Adobe's fundamentals are strong. Its earnings per share have compounded at 18% annually since 2019, while its valuation multiple has shrunk by 14% per year. This divergence between performance and sentiment suggests a significant investment opportunity.

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A market bifurcation is underway where investors prioritize AI startups with extreme growth rates over traditional SaaS companies. This creates a "changing of the guard," forcing established SaaS players to adopt AI aggressively or risk being devalued as legacy assets, while AI-native firms command premium valuations.

Traditional valuation models assume growth decays over time. However, when a company at scale, like Databricks, begins to reaccelerate, it defies these models. This rare phenomenon signals an expanding market or competitive advantage, justifying massive valuation premiums that seem disconnected from public comps.

While other AI models may be more powerful, Adobe's Firefly offers a crucial advantage: legal safety. It's trained only on licensed data, protecting enterprise clients like Hollywood studios from costly copyright violations. This makes it the most commercially viable option for high-stakes professional work.

Current market multiples appear rich compared to history, but this view may be shortsighted. The long-term earnings potential unleashed by AI, combined with a higher-quality market composition, could make today's valuations seem artificially high ahead of a major earnings inflection.

Companies like Tesla and Oracle achieve massive valuations not through profits, but by capturing the dominant market story, such as becoming an "AI company." Investors should analyze a company's ability to create and own the next compelling narrative.

Traditional valuation multiples are increasingly misleading because GAAP rules expense intangible investments (R&D, brand building) rather than capitalizing them. For a company like Microsoft, properly capitalizing these investments can drop its P/E ratio from 35 to 30, revealing a more attractive valuation.

Financial models struggle to project sustained high growth rates (>30% YoY). Analysts naturally revert to the mean, causing them to undervalue companies that defy this and maintain high growth for years, creating an opportunity for investors who spot this persistence.

Unlike Kodak, which protected its film business and went bankrupt, Adobe integrated generative AI (Firefly) directly into its core products. By embracing the technology that threatened it, Adobe established itself as a leader in AI-powered creativity and saw its stock surge.

While AI investment has exploded, US productivity has barely risen. Valuations are priced as if a societal transformation is complete, yet 95% of GenAI pilots fail to positively impact company P&Ls. This gap between market expectation and real-world economic benefit creates systemic risk.

Recent acquisitions of slow-growth public SaaS companies are not just value grabs but turnaround plays. Acquirers believe these companies' distribution can be revitalized by injecting AI-native products, creating a path back to high growth and higher multiples.