Autodesk, Inc. (ADSK) just reminded Wall Street why optimism pays off sometimes. The design software giant reported third-quarter results that beat expectations across the board, driven by surging demand for its cloud-based tools and AI-powered automation features that are reshaping how architects, engineers, and construction firms work.
Revenue climbed 18% year-over-year to $1.85 billion for the third quarter of fiscal 2026, topping the $1.81 billion consensus estimate. Adjusted earnings came in at $2.67 per share, comfortably ahead of the $2.50 analysts were expecting. Not a bad performance for a company in the middle of overhauling its entire business model.
CEO Andrew Anagnost pointed to artificial intelligence-driven tools and automation as the secret sauce behind the strong quarter. Translation: customers are willing to pay up for software that makes their workflows faster and smarter, especially when infrastructure spending is booming and data centers are popping up everywhere.
Looking Ahead: Guidance Gets a Boost
Management clearly likes what it's seeing. For the fourth quarter, Autodesk expects revenue between $1.90 billion and $1.92 billion, with adjusted earnings of $2.59 to $2.67 per share.
The bigger story is the raised full-year outlook. The company now forecasts fiscal 2026 revenue of $7.15 billion to $7.17 billion and adjusted earnings of $10.18 to $10.25 per share—well above the prior Street estimate of $9.95 per share. When a company raises guidance this late in the fiscal year, it's usually not just being optimistic.
What the Analysts Are Saying
Wall Street took notice. Rosenblatt analyst Blair Abernethy maintained a Buy rating and bumped his price target from $355 to $375. RBC Capital Markets analyst Matthew Hedberg kept his Outperform rating and $380 price target intact.
The Rosenblatt View: Abernethy highlighted that revenue beat expectations by about 2%, while total billings grew 21%, slightly ahead of consensus. The real strength came from Autodesk's Architecture, Engineering, and Construction business, fueled by global civil infrastructure projects and data center construction.
Despite navigating a turbulent macro environment and transitioning its billing model from multi-year to annual contracts, Autodesk executed well and expanded profitability. Operating margin hit 38%, above expectations, thanks to cost discipline and higher revenue.
The company now expects fiscal 2026 revenue growth around 17% overall—about 11% when you strip out the billing transition effects—with operating margins reaching approximately 37.5%. Abernethy said he's making modest upward revisions to his forecasts and has even started modeling out fiscal 2028 estimates.
Breaking down segment performance, AEC revenue exceeded his forecast, AutoCAD/LT showed solid growth, and Manufacturing also beat expectations. The Fusion 360 platform continues gaining momentum with strong adoption of new AI features like AutoConstrain. Media & Entertainment remained relatively soft, but you can't win everywhere.
Cash flow is improving as the billing transition nears completion. Autodesk generated $430 million in free cash flow during the quarter and bought back 1.2 million shares. Remaining performance obligations grew 20%, providing solid visibility into future revenue.
Geographically, both the U.S. and Europe delivered double-digit growth in constant currency, while Asia posted mid-teens growth. Direct sales now represent 66% of revenue as the new transaction model rolls out globally.
Abernethy projected fourth-quarter revenue of $1.91 billion, up from his previous estimate of $1.85 billion, and EPS of $2.61, up from $2.52.
The RBC Capital Take: Hedberg emphasized that Autodesk continues to outperform through its transition to a transaction model and operational efficiency initiatives. Execution remains strong, and he expressed continued confidence in the company's target of 41% operating margins by fiscal 2029.
The analyst noted that Autodesk beat expectations across key metrics and once again raised fiscal 2026 guidance. Strength in architecture, engineering, construction, and operations, combined with higher up-front revenue and accelerating traction in the Autodesk Store, stood out. He believes the store model is proving more effective at moving up-market.
Hedberg views the transaction model shift favorably, noting it enables deeper customer relationships, more automation, and a modernized channel strategy. Cost discipline and earlier restructuring efforts are translating into better-than-expected profitability, with operating margins more than 100 basis points above his forecasts.
The analyst also highlighted Autodesk's AI positioning, noting the company holds a strategic advantage through its customer base, data depth, and product breadth. He said management's commentary on licensing dynamics was important: customers still face capacity constraints, workloads vary between high- and low-labor intensity projects, and Autodesk aims to reduce the number of workers needed per project while increasing the number of projects—driving higher consumption-based monetization over time.
While fiscal 2026 guidance moved higher, investors are already shifting focus to fiscal 2027. Hedberg forecasts 9% fiscal 2027 revenue growth, below the 11% consensus, and expects flat operating margins versus consensus calling for margin expansion. Still, he believes upside to early fiscal 2027 guidance remains likely.
Hedberg projected fourth-quarter revenue of $1.91 billion, up from his previous estimate of $1.86 billion, and EPS of $2.63, up from $2.52.
ADSK Price Action: Autodesk shares were up 3.34% at $304.25 at the time of publication on Wednesday.