Autodesk stock falls as $3.6B MaintainX deal worries investors

May 29, 2026

Shares of Autodesk ADSK fell sharply on Friday despite the company reporting stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings, as investors reacted cautiously to its planned $3.6 billion acquisition of maintenance software company MaintainX.

Autodesk stock dropped about 4% in trading to around $230 after the company announced the all-cash acquisition, its largest deal to date.

The decline extended the stock’s difficult year, with shares now down roughly 19% in 2026.

The selloff came even after Autodesk posted fiscal first-quarter adjusted earnings of $2.99 per share on revenue of $1.93 billion, beating analyst expectations of $2.84 per share and $1.89 billion in revenue.

The company also raised its full-year guidance for revenue and earnings.

MaintainX acquisition sparks valuation concerns

Investor attention quickly shifted from the earnings beat to Autodesk’s decision to acquire MaintainX, a maintenance and operations software platform focused on factory and facility management.

MaintainX expects to generate more than $135 million in annualized recurring revenue in 2026, with annual growth above 50%, according to Autodesk.

The acquisition is expected to expand Autodesk’s footprint beyond design and engineering into operations management, creating a new business unit called Autodesk Operations Solutions.

The division will combine MaintainX with products including Fusion Operations, Tandem, and Flexsim.

Chief Executive Andrew Anagnost said the deal is aimed at linking asset design and operation workflows more closely.

“Autodesk is expanding beyond design and make to operations, ensuring data and insights flow seamlessly in a continuous lifecycle,” Anagnost said in a statement. “Our goal with MaintainX is to bring deep operational expertise, contextual data, and workflows that enhance our ability to use AI to converge digital and physical worlds.”

Autodesk plans to fund the transaction with approximately $1.6 billion in cash and debt financing for the remainder.

The deal is expected to close before the end of Autodesk’s fiscal year in January 2027, pending regulatory approval.

Analysts remain positive despite investor skepticism

While investors reacted negatively to the size and valuation of the acquisition, several Wall Street analysts maintained bullish views on Autodesk shares.

BTIG analyst Nick Altmann estimated that the transaction values MaintainX at roughly 18 times expected 2027 revenue, representing a premium to many software peers at a time when sector valuation multiples have compressed.

Still, BTIG maintained a Buy rating and a $300 price target on Autodesk stock, arguing the acquisition strengthens Autodesk’s customer workflow positioning while adding valuable operational data useful for virtual modeling and AI applications.

Oppenheimer analyst Ken Wong also viewed the acquisition favorably, calling operations a “natural extension” of Autodesk’s role in the design and building process.

However, Wong acknowledged investor concerns surrounding execution risks and slowing organic growth.

“In addition to the price tag, investors are wary of potential organic growth moderation and execution risks as go-to-market synergies aren’t apparent,” Wong wrote in a note on Friday.

UBS similarly reiterated its Buy rating and $290 price target following the results.

The bank said Autodesk’s quarter likely exceeded expectations, especially amid fears the company could reduce guidance.

UBS also noted that the company has been improving execution as it completes ongoing go-to-market and business model changes.

AI and operations expansion drive long-term strategy

The MaintainX acquisition highlights Autodesk’s broader effort to position itself within AI-driven industrial software markets.

MaintainX’s software tracks work orders, inspection records, asset performance, and maintenance activity across factories and facilities.

Autodesk believes the operational data generated by the platform could support future AI-driven decision-making tools tied to physical infrastructure.

MaintainX founder and CEO Chris Turlica said the merger would help bridge operational and engineering workflows.

Despite Friday’s decline, analysts continue viewing Autodesk as capable of sustaining durable double-digit growth over the longer term, supported by expansion into operations software and AI-enabled infrastructure management.

The post Autodesk stock falls as $3.6B MaintainX deal worries investors appeared first on Invezz