Adobe profit up on strong Creative Cloud subscriptions

Company says 833,000 subscribers signed up for Creative Cloud in fourth quarter

Eric Snowden, director of Design for Adobe/Behance, displays Adobe software for the new iPad Pro during an Apple media event in San Francisco, earlier this year
Eric Snowden, director of Design for Adobe/Behance, displays Adobe software for the new iPad Pro during an Apple media event in San Francisco, earlier this year

Adobe Systems reported a profit that topped market expectations for the ninth straight quarter on strong subscriber growth for its Creative Cloud package of software tools, which includes Photoshop.

Adobe’s shares jumped 4.7 per cent to $93.10 in extended trading on Thursday and are set to hit a record high on Friday.

The company said 833,000 subscribers signed up for Creative Cloud in the fourth quarter ended November 27th, more than the 678,200 additions analysts were expecting, according to research firm FactSet StreetAccount.

Creative Cloud includes graphic design tool Photoshop, web design software Dreamweaver and web video building application Flash, among other software.

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Adobe, which has seen strong growth from Creative Cloud, has been nimble enough to attract users other than enterprises and professionals to the software suite.

About 52 per cent of customers subscribe to the highest-priced full Creative Cloud while the rest subscribe to individual products. Of those, Photoshop Lightroom was the fastest growing, chief finance officer Mark Garrett said in an interview.

“It’s growing the most because it’s attracting new users ... hobbyists and consumers and people that would never buy the Creative products before, so it’s expanded our market opportunity,” Mr Garrett said.

San Jose-based Adobe has been switching to web-based subscriptions from traditional licensed software to enjoy a more predictable recurring revenue stream.

"(Adobe has) largely completed this transition to a recurrent revenue model. You are starting to see revenue stack even though your expenses aren't rising as quickly," said FBR Capital Markets analyst Samad Samana.

Revenue from its digital media business, which houses Creative Cloud, jumped 35 per cent to $875.3 million.

The business - also home to Acrobat, which enables the ubiquitous PDF format for e-books - makes up the bulk of Adobe’s revenue.

Revenue from its digital marketing business, which offers tools for businesses to analyze customer interactions and manage social media content, rose 2.3 per cent to $382.7 million.

Total revenue rose to $1.31 billion.

Despite the 21.7 per cent increase in fourth-quarter revenue only matching analysts’ estimates, a much lower 3.4 per cent bump in total operating costs also helped Adobe’s profit beat estimates.

Adobe’s net income soared to $222.7 million, or 44 cents per share, in the quarter, from $88.1 million, or 17 cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding items, it earned 62 cents per share, beating average analyst estimate of 60 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Adobe’s shares have risen 22.4 per cent this year through Thursday’s close.

Reuters