Down 19% Year to Date, Should You Buy This AI Growth Stock?

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Despite a sustained rally in the S&P 500 and the tech sector, Adobe (NASDAQ: ADBE) is hovering around its lowest level since June. The software as a service (SaaS) giant has had a choppy year, selling off big after reporting earnings in March, rallying after a strong quarter in June, then selling off again in September.

Adobe's fiscal-year calendar doesn't follow the earnings season of most other tech giants, so its fourth-quarter and full fiscal-year results won't be reported until Dec. 11. But Adobe's own projections call for decent, but not great results for the full-fiscal year.

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Here's why Adobe has been such a poor performer relative to its peers and whether the artificial intelligence (AI) growth stock is a buy now.

A person smiling while working with a laptop computer and pen and paper in a public setting.
Image source: Getty Images.

Adobe is drastically underperforming the benchmarks

The Vanguard Information Technology ETF, which closely mirrors the tech sector, is up 21.8% year to date (YTD), slightly higher than the S&P 500. Adobe isn't just lagging those benchmarks, it is down 19% YTD and is the worst-performing component of the top-10 holdings in the Vanguard Information Technology ETF.

NVDA Chart
NVDA Chart

Typically, the longer a sector-wide rally goes on, the more investors may be willing to scoop up shares of laggards that are out of favor if they are a better value. There may be a simple reason why that hasn't happened with Adobe.

Adobe isn't showing Wall Street the money

Adobe pioneered the SaaS business model when it introduced a subscription service for its Creative Cloud suite of apps in 2012. The business model unlocked sales and margin growth for Adobe and transformed it into one of the most-valuable enterprise-software companies.

The following chart showcases Adobe's explosive sales, earnings, and margin growth over the last decade.

ADBE Revenue (TTM) Chart
ADBE Revenue (TTM) Chart

Adobe went from a low-margin company to a high-margin cash cow. But in recent years, Adobe's growth has stalled. Over the last three years, Adobe's operating expenses have slightly outpaced its sales growth, impacting margins. What's more, its diluted earnings per share (EPS) are up just 18.2% in the last three years, and that's even factoring in more aggressive stock repurchases.

If you've turned into an Adobe earnings call over the last year or two, you would have heard big promises that AI is unlocking unprecedented growth for Adobe by accelerating innovation and creating a better customer experience. But so far, Adobe's higher spending simply hasn't translated to the bottom line.