DocuSign (DOCU) Stock Drops 5% After Earnings — Here’s Why the Beat Wasn’t Enough

05-Jun-2026 CoinCentral

TLDR

  • DocuSign posted Q1 adjusted EPS of $1.09, beating the $1.00 estimate, with revenue of $830.2M vs. $823.23M expected
  • Stock fell ~5% in premarket/after-hours trading despite the beat
  • Q2 revenue guidance midpoint of $867M is barely above the $866M analyst consensus
  • Fiscal 2027 revenue guidance midpoint of $3.496B is only slightly above the $3.49B estimate
  • Jefferies raised its price target to $50 from $45 but kept a Hold rating

DocuSign (DOCU) beat Wall Street on the top and bottom line in Q1, but the stock dropped around 5% after hours as investors found little to get excited about in the company’s forward guidance.


DOCU Stock Card
DocuSign, Inc., DOCU

The stock had climbed 27% from its February low heading into the print, so expectations were running high.

Q1 adjusted EPS came in at $1.09, above the $1.00 consensus. Revenue hit $830.2 million, up 9% year-over-year and ahead of the $823.23 million estimate.

GAAP net income was $0.40 per diluted share, up from $0.34 in the same quarter last year. Non-GAAP gross margin dipped slightly to 81.5% from 82.3% a year earlier.

Free cash flow rose to $289.4 million from $227.8 million a year ago. DocuSign also bought back $317.5 million worth of stock, up sharply from $183.4 million in the prior year period.

Guidance Leaves Little Room for Upside

Q2 revenue guidance came in at $865M–$869M, with a midpoint of $867M — essentially in line with the $866M analyst consensus. Not the kind of raise that moves markets higher.

Full-year fiscal 2027 revenue guidance of $3.49B–$3.502B puts the midpoint just barely above the $3.49B consensus. The implied growth rate, excluding FX, is 7.1%–7.5%.

Dollar Net Retention held flat at 102%, unchanged from the prior quarter — a number analysts are watching closely.

IAM Progress, But Questions Remain

DocuSign’s Intelligent Agreement Management platform now makes up 12.6% of Annual Recurring Revenue, up from 10.8% at the end of January. CEO Allan Thygesen said Q1 saw 40,000 customers investing in the IAM roadmap.

Morgan Stanley acknowledged the solid execution but noted the core debate hasn’t shifted: “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 that view, saying DNR remaining flat at 102% leaves them “waiting for clearer evidence IAM can drive a sustained growth recovery.”

Jefferies raised its price target to $50 from $45 following the revenue beat, but kept its Hold rating intact. The firm noted the stock trades at roughly 10x CY2027 earnings — the lowest multiple in its mid-cap coverage universe.

Enterprise bookings in North America grew at the fastest pace in the quarter, per Jefferies

The post DocuSign (DOCU) Stock Drops 5% After Earnings — Here’s Why the Beat Wasn’t Enough appeared first on CoinCentral.

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