Friday, June 5

Shares of DocuSign Inc. DOCU moved lower on Friday after the electronic signature and agreement management software provider offered guidance that left investors looking for stronger signs of accelerating growth.

DocuSign stock fell 6% in trading, extending a three-session losing streak and putting the shares down more than 12% for the week.

The decline came despite better-than-expected revenue and earnings, as analysts focused on a forward outlook that largely matched existing market expectations.

Earnings beat but guidance remains measured

For the fiscal first quarter, DocuSign reported revenue of $830.2 million, up 9% from a year earlier and above analyst estimates of roughly $824 million.

Adjusted earnings came in at $1.09 per share, beating consensus expectations of approximately $0.99 to $1.00 per share.

The company also delivered strong profitability metrics. Operating margin reached 32%, while free cash flow margin stood at 35%. Net cash provided by operating activities totaled $321.7 million, and free cash flow came in at $289.4 million.

DocuSign repurchased approximately $318 million of its common stock during the quarter, marking the largest quarterly share buyback in the company’s history.

Looking ahead, management forecast second-quarter revenue between $865 million and $869 million, broadly in line with analyst expectations of about $866 million.

The company also raised its fiscal 2027 revenue guidance to a range of $3.49 billion to $3.502 billion from its previous outlook of $3.484 billion to $3.496 billion. Analysts had been expecting revenue of roughly $3.49 billion.

Despite the increase, several analysts suggested the revised guidance did not meaningfully change the company’s long-term growth outlook.

A key focus for investors remains DocuSign’s Intelligent Agreement Management (IAM) platform, which integrates artificial intelligence into agreement workflows.

The company said IAM is now used by around 40,000 customers and represents 12.6% of annual recurring revenue, up from 10.8% at the end of January.

DocuSign has expanded the platform through partnerships with AI companies, including Anthropic and OpenAI, while management highlighted growing enterprise adoption from customers such as Experian and HSBC. 

The company expects IAM to account for about 18% of annual recurring revenue by the end of fiscal 2027 and believes broader AI adoption, expanding platform usage, and improved customer retention will help accelerate recurring revenue growth during the year.

Chief Executive Officer Allan Thygesen said, “In Q1, we saw continued growing demand for DocuSign’s AI-native IAM platform with 40,000 customers investing in our rapidly expanding roadmap.” 

“We delivered significant innovation this quarter while driving strong financial results through durable revenue growth, substantial free cash flow, and record share buybacks.”

Analysts remain cautious on long-term growth

Although analysts generally viewed the quarter as operationally solid, many maintained a cautious stance on the pace at which IAM can drive a broader growth reacceleration.

Morgan Stanley wrote that “DOCU showed solid Q1 execution, strong margins/FCF and steady IAM progress, but the debate is unchanged: IAM traction is improving, yet financial inflection is limited and economics remain too opaque to prove a durable path back to double-digit growth.”

Wolfe Research echoed similar concerns, stating: “While IAM outperformed expectations and enterprise traction improved, Dollar Net Retention (DNR) remained flat at 102%, and leaves us waiting for clearer evidence IAM can drive a sustained growth recovery.”

The mixed analyst reaction reflected the broader market view that while DocuSign continues to execute well operationally and build momentum around its AI strategy, investors are still waiting for clearer evidence that those investments can translate into sustained double-digit growth.

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