Good morning. Adobe is doubling down on agentic AI to make creativity more conversational. 
At its annual MAX user conference on Tuesday, Adobe (
No. 201 on the Fortune 500) announced recent product innovations and how its partnership with 
Google Cloud will bring the tech company’s latest AI models directly into Adobe apps. 
Adobe is expanding its agentic AI capabilities to Photoshop and Adobe Express, giving users access to its AI-powered assistants. The company also previewed plans to extend these conversational capabilities to models like ChatGPT, allowing users to edit and generate content using natural language prompts. An Adobe Express–ChatGPT integration is expected soon.
Google brings crucial technical expertise, while Adobe leads in creative solutions, Dan Durn, EVP and CFO at Adobe, told me. By partnering, the companies combine strengths to reach customers, said Durn, who leads finance, technology, security, and operations. 
Creative agents and conversational interfaces built into Adobe tools make products like Express and Photoshop more productive and easier to use, he explained. Users no longer need to master complex menus; instead, they simply type what they want the product to do, he said. 
Through the partnership, Adobe will be able to integrate Google’s latest AI models, including Gemini, Veo, and Imagen, into Adobe’s applications as they come to market. Enterprise customers will soon be able to customize Google’s AI models using Vertex AI and Adobe Firefly Foundry to create brand-specific AI models for large-scale content generation, Durn said. 
Adobe’s expanding AI ecosystemAdobe is developing proprietary Firefly models but also deeply integrating partner models, Durn explained. More than $5 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR) now comes from users engaging with Adobe and AI capabilities in their workflows, he added. “We expect that number to keep growing,” he said. “As we proliferate these capabilities, I want AI-influenced ARR to reach 100% of our business.”
The company also held an investor meeting during the MAX event, reaffirming Q4 and FY2025 targets. Adobe reported double-digit subscription revenue growth, non-GAAP operating margins above 46%, and nearly $10 billion in operating cash flow over the past year.
Dan Romanoff, senior equity analyst at Morningstar, wrote in a Tuesday note that the firm maintains its fair value estimate of $560 per share for wide-moat Adobe and sees shares as attractively valued.
“We don’t think Adobe has erased investor concerns, but we see growing momentum in product innovation and sales execution,” Romanoff wrote. “After good Q3 results and an impressive MAX conference, we sense Adobe has turned the corner.”
Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen told 
Bloomberg in an interview that Wall Street undervalues the company, with AI-focused investors overlooking Adobe’s profitability and growth. Narayen expects the market to shift its attention to Adobe’s strength in AI integration in applications. 
Heading into 2026, Durn aims to continue driving customer-focused growth. Adobe has more than 700 million monthly active users, up 25% year-over-year in Q3, he said.
“We’re building an AI-first ideation playground with powerful capabilities presented in an approachable way for the next generation of creators,” Durn said.
Sheryl Estradasheryl.estrada@fortune.com