Equity Investment Corp initiated a $77.7 million position in Adobe during Q4 2025, according to 13F filings published this week. The move accompanied broader institutional flows into fixed income vehicles, with Johnson Investment Counsel allocating $43.3 million to Vanguard Intermediate-Term Treasury ETF (VGIT) in the same period. The filings reveal a dual strategy: locking duration at elevated yields while selectively adding software exposure.
The VGIT allocation matters because it marks a shift from cash-like short-term instruments to intermediate maturities, capturing the 4.2-4.8% yield band before the market priced in additional Fed cuts. Johnson Investment Counsel's deployment into five-to-seven-year Treasury paper suggests conviction that terminal rates will stabilize rather than compress further. The Adobe position by Equity Investment Corp follows a 12% drawdown in the stock during Q4, bringing the entry price to approximately $420 per share. The firm sized the position at roughly 1.8% of its reported equity AUM, consistent with a conviction-weight allocation rather than index tracking.
The dual signal—fixed income plus software equity—reflects a preference for predictable cash flows over cyclical exposure. Adobe generates $5.4 billion in annual free cash flow with 91% subscription revenue, offering equity-like returns with bond-like visibility. Allocators rotating into intermediate Treasuries simultaneously are hedging recession risk while maintaining yield pickup over cash. The timing aligns with Q4's 140 basis points of yield compression across the curve, suggesting these managers acted before the move fully priced.
Goldman Sachs reported this week that 40% of family offices plan to raise public and private equity allocations in 2025, a figure that sits uneasily beside the fixed income surge. The tension resolves when viewed through duration matching: offices are extending fixed income maturities to lock yields while concentrating equity exposure in margin-resilient names. The Adobe purchase fits this frame—software margins held at 38% through Q4 even as enterprise IT budgets flattened. Equity Investment Corp's entry suggests a view that Creative Cloud pricing power remains intact despite macro softness.
Allocators should track two follow-on events in the next thirty to sixty days. First, whether additional 13F amendments show similar duration extension into VGIT or comparable vehicles, which would confirm a sector-wide positioning shift rather than isolated trades. Second, Adobe's March earnings call will clarify enterprise renewal rates for Document Cloud subscriptions, the revenue segment most exposed to corporate budget cuts. If renewal rates hold above 95%, the Equity Investment Corp thesis strengthens. If they slip below 92%, the position becomes a test of conviction.
The fixed income deployment into intermediate Treasuries also sets up a convexity question for Q2. If the Fed pauses cuts and inflation data firms, the five-to-seven-year part of the curve faces duration risk. Johnson Investment Counsel's $43.3 million VGIT position would see mark-to-market pressure, though the carry offsets moderate moves. The Adobe equity position offers no such carry cushion, only the bet that subscription resilience outweighs multiple compression. The filings suggest that for allocators with this view, $420 per share was the strike price worth taking.