https://www.cnbc.com/2025/06/06/docusign-st...
Stock tanks almost 19% after DocuSign cuts sales outlook. They did however, announce a $1 billion share buyback program. Investors first.
DocuSign provides a digital platform enabling businesses and individuals to sign, manage, and automate agreements through its e-signature technology and related workflow tools.
| type | open | high | low |
market cap |
volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| stock | $67.63 | $69.57 | $67.30 | $13.5B | 2.91M |
| eps |
price to earnings |
price to sales |
operating margin |
profit margin |
yield |
| +$0.41 | 50.55 | 17.22 | 10.43% | 10.23% | 0% |
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/06/06/docusign-st...
Stock tanks almost 19% after DocuSign cuts sales outlook. They did however, announce a $1 billion share buyback program. Investors first.
Been wondering why DocuSign seems to have a monopoly in the digital paperwork / e-signature market. Normally these kinds of single option companies have a kind of network effect working for them. Like how Microsoft bundles Teams, Office, Windows, etc. but with digital paperwork, seems like it should be fairly straightforward to migrate between platforms. Or maybe I just don't understand how those systems actually store the digital paperwork. Could be all proprietary and stored online in the DocuSign cloud?