Report · EDA Tools

Synopsys: A Long-Term Owner's Perspective

Synopsys, Inc.
SNPS · US
Current Price
$524.74
May 23, 2026 close
Baillie Growth Score
52/100
Medium
Intrinsic Value · Three-Tier Range Current price $524.74 · Above the optimistic ceiling · future growth overdrawn

Composite valuation range · conservative $150–$220 / fair $280–$380 / optimistic $430–$520. At $524.74, Above the optimistic ceiling · future growth overdrawn.

Lead

The global EDA leader, now in the middle of integrating Ansys. FY25 revenue reached 7.054 billion with 77% gross margin and R&D running at 35% of revenue. At 80.9x PE, the current price already bakes in both a successful integration and a failure to commoditize, leaving an ideal buy range of 300 to 380 dollars. Rating Watch: a high-quality business priced with no margin of safety.

Conclusion First

Here is the conclusion up front: this is a high-quality company I am happy to study for the long term, but one I would not rush to bid for at today's price. Synopsys's core EDA business is still an excellent one. The difficulty is not whether the company is good, but whether the current price leaves a new buyer enough room to be wrong. The latest quotes put SNPS at roughly 524.74 dollars, with a market cap of about 100.1 billion dollars. In the most recent reported quarter the company is still in the integration phase that followed its acquisition of Ansys, and GAAP earnings, interest burden, amortization, share dilution, and restructuring charges all make the valuation noticeably harder to read. For an investor with a horizon of ten years or more and a balanced, slightly conservative stance, I would define it as a good business that lacks a margin of safety at the current price.

A note on scope: below I will try to separate facts, assumptions, inferences, and opinions. The facts come mainly from Synopsys's latest 10-K and 10-Q, the Q1 2026 earnings press release, the 2026 proxy, SEMI industry data, CMA and regulatory filings, and current market quotes. Assumptions are used mostly for valuation. Inferences are business judgments built from the facts. Ratings such as "Buy" or "Watch" are opinions. Because the company went through two major changes in reporting scope over the past two years, the divestiture of Software Integrity and the consolidation of Ansys, I give priority to the comparable continuing-operations basis in the FY2025 10-K and flag clearly which parts are not comparable.

To summarize my preliminary judgment: the investment rating is Watch. The core conclusion is that the business is excellent, the moat is deep, and long-term demand is steady, but the current price has already prepaid a great deal for future growth and a successful integration. There is no margin of safety at today's price.

This is a better fit for long-term growth investors who deeply understand EDA and engineering software and can withstand high-valuation volatility, and a poorer fit for traditional value investors who insist on low valuation and a wide margin of safety. The three largest uncertainties are the effectiveness of the Ansys integration, the pace of repair in the Design IP business, and disruption from China and export controls.

My core view compresses into five sentences. First, Synopsys's EDA core remains a strong-demand, high-stickiness, high-barrier business. Second, the Ansys acquisition expands the company from "an outstanding semiconductor design software leader" into a larger "silicon to systems" platform, raising the long-term ceiling but also making the financials more complex, the leverage higher, and the execution risk greater over the short to medium term. Third, the company's latest disclosures on backlog, the time-based and maintenance revenue mix, cash generation, and customer stickiness all show this is not a fragile software company. Fourth, at the current price the stock trades at roughly 80.9x PE, about 43.9x TTM FCF, and about 76x the owner earnings I estimate on a more conservative basis, which is clearly not cheap. Fifth, this is more of a "worth waiting for the right price" company than a "should own at any price" company.

Understanding the Business and Industry Landscape

How does this company actually make money

Fact: In FY2025 Synopsys defines itself as "the leader in engineering solutions from silicon to systems," with two reporting segments: Design Automation and Design IP. Design Automation includes traditional EDA, Ansys simulation and analysis software (S&A), and other related businesses. Design IP provides interface IP, memory interface IP, security IP, embedded processors, and other semiconductor IP. The company frames its role as an engineering software and IP partner that helps customers get to market faster, with higher quality, lower risk, and better margins.

Fact: In FY2025 the company's continuing-operations revenue was 7.054 billion dollars, of which Design Automation was 5.302 billion and Design IP was 1.752 billion, a roughly 75/25 split. Q1 FY2026 revenue reached 2.409 billion dollars, up sharply from 1.455 billion a year earlier, mainly because Ansys contributed 885.6 million dollars of revenue in the quarter. For full-year FY2025 Ansys contributed 756.6 million dollars of revenue, which shows that 2025 was only a partial year of consolidation and that 2026 will be closer to a full-year basis.

Inference: At its core Synopsys makes three kinds of money. The first is EDA software licenses and subscriptions that help chip companies complete synthesis, place and route, verification, timing, power, manufacturing, and other critical design steps. The second is high-quality, silicon-proven semiconductor IP that shortens design time and lowers failure risk for customers. The third is the multiphysics simulation and analysis software added through Ansys, which lets customers digitally validate thermal, structural, electromagnetic, and fluid problems at the system level. In other words, this company does not sell "general-purpose software." It sells the tools that are hardest to replace, most costly to get wrong, and closest to the core of a customer's R&D budget within the engineering workflow. I consider this business model understandable.

Fact: On customers, Synopsys discloses clearly that its EDA and Design IP customers are mainly semiconductor companies and electronic systems companies, while Ansys S&A customers extend into broader industries including high tech, aerospace and defense, automotive, energy, industrial equipment, materials and chemicals, consumer, healthcare, and construction. The company also discloses that in 2025 no single customer accounted for more than 10% of revenue, whereas in 2024 and 2023 a single customer once accounted for 12.6% and 13.5% of revenue respectively. Customer concentration is therefore not out of control, but the reality that "a large customer's budget shifts can move results" does exist.

Fact: Revenue is relatively predictable, but this should not be overstated. In FY2025, time-based products revenue was 3.490 billion dollars, or 49% of revenue, and maintenance and service revenue was 1.554 billion dollars, or 22% of revenue. Together, about 71% of revenue comes from time-based or maintenance and service recognition. By Q1 FY2026 these two were 39% and 30%, totaling about 69%. In addition, the company's FY2025 year-end backlog was about 11.4 billion dollars, of which 2 billion dollars were non-cancelable FSA commitments. The company expects that, excluding FSA, about 45% of backlog will be recognized within the next 12 months, with most of the rest recognized over the following three years. This structure shows that revenue is not as linear as a "pure SaaS subscription," but visibility remains high.

Fact: The cost structure also resembles a high-quality engineering software company. FY2025 gross profit was 5.431 billion dollars for a gross margin of about 77.0%. R&D expense was 2.479 billion dollars, about 35% of revenue. Sales and marketing was 1.074 billion dollars, about 15%. Capital expenditure was 169 million dollars, only about 2.4% of revenue. This shows that the company's real "capital consumption" is not plants and equipment but sustained, intense R&D, talent, and acquisition integration.

Inference: As a long-term business owner, I understand this business as follows: it is not simply "selling software licenses," but selling insurance on correctness, efficiency, and the cost of failure within a customer's R&D workflow. As long as advanced process nodes, complex SoCs, multi-die packaging, AI chips, automotive electronics, and system-level verification keep growing more complex, the value of these tools will not disappear. The catch is that after consolidating Ansys the company spans a wider set of engineering domains, so its business boundary is broader than when it was purely EDA, and understandability slips slightly from "a very pure EDA leader." I score this business's understandability at 4 out of 5.

Opinion: If the stock market closed for five years, I would be happy to own the company itself. But if I had to take it on at today's price, I would not feel at ease. The issue is more about the entry price than the quality of the enterprise. That is precisely the most important dividing line in value investing. Given the current valuation, my answer is: I am willing to track this business for the long term, but I am not willing to treat today's stock price as a self-evident acquisition price.

Industry and competitive landscape

Fact: On the demand side, the EDMD data published by SEMI and the ESD Alliance show that the electronic system design industry grew revenue 8.6% year over year to 5.089 billion dollars in Q2 2025, with a four-quarter moving average growth of 10.4%. Within that, CAE (computer-aided engineering) revenue grew 17.2% year over year, and semiconductor IP revenue grew 8.7%. This shows that the "EDA plus SIP plus CAE and S&A" space in which Synopsys operates is not a declining industry but is still in a mature yet continuously growing stage.

Fact: Synopsys itself states clearly that EDA industry growth depends mainly on the semiconductor and electronics industries, with its revenue heavily dependent on new design starts, customer budgets, customer product demand, and changes in technical standards and product complexity. In other words, this is not a utility-like industry; it is still affected by the electronics cycle, design starts, export controls, and the cadence of large customers.

Fact: The competitive landscape is one of the most attractive features of this company. In its decision reviewing Synopsys's acquisition of Ansys, the UK's CMA stated explicitly that barriers to entry in the relevant markets are high, owing to intense R&D investment, technical expertise, and the time required for development. In the RTL power analysis subsegment it examined, the merged entity would be the largest supplier, with the only remaining meaningful competitors being Siemens and Cadence. Regulators also emphasized that customers commonly need to "mix and match" software from different vendors, so interoperability and long-term ecosystem stickiness both matter a great deal.

Inference: Viewed in layers, EDA is a textbook oligopolistic, R&D-heavy, standards-driven, high-switching-cost industry. The engineering simulation field where Ansys sits is more fragmented but is also high-barrier professional software. After consolidating Ansys, the biggest change for Synopsys is not "crossing into a completely unfamiliar field," but extending from chip design verification into system-level simulation and verification. This raises the TAM but also turns the company from "an extremely pure EDA leader" into "a more integrated engineering software platform." I believe the industry attributes are still excellent, but complexity has risen.

Fact: The company does not dodge reality on competition. The 10-K states plainly that the EDA market is highly competitive. In Design Automation the company competes with other EDA vendors and with customers' in-house tools; in Design IP it competes with other IP providers and with customers' in-house IP; and Ansys S&A faces public companies, geographic vendors, startups, and users' in-house solutions. Synopsys also discloses that China is using policy and funding to build up domestic EDA capability.

Inference: So this is not a "monopoly that wins by default" industry. A more accurate statement is: this is a good company in a good industry, good in that competition is fierce yet new entrants struggle to form a systemic threat, and poor in that any high valuation tempts you to take the industry's advantages too much for granted. I score industry attractiveness at 4.5 out of 5. The only deduction is that technology evolves extremely fast and that export controls and geopolitics keep disrupting local share, which is already clearly visible in the China market and the Design IP business.

Moat and Management's Capital Allocation

Moat analysis

Fact: Synopsys's moat does not come from a single factor but from several stacked together. The first layer is scale and R&D advantage: in FY2025 the company invested 2.479 billion dollars in R&D and holds more than 3,800 granted US and foreign patents, with terms extending to 2044. The second layer is switching costs and workflow embedding: customers often use many tools across a complex chip design flow, and once a given toolchain, set of verification models, IP verification results, engineering workflow, and engineer training system is deeply embedded, the cost of replacement is very high. The third layer is ecosystem interoperability: regulatory filings make clear that customers value interoperability between different pieces of software and cannot view any single point tool in isolation. The fourth layer is brand and credibility: in chip and system design the cost of error is extremely high, so tools and IP that have "been verified and adopted at advanced process nodes" naturally command a premium.

Inference: Against the ten categories of moat you provided, my judgment is as follows. Brand advantage: yes, but essentially an "engineering credibility brand" rather than a consumer brand. Cost advantage: moderate; it does not win on low cost but on lowering customers' total R&D cost. Scale advantage: strong. Network effects: weak to moderate, more accurately an ecosystem and training effect. Switching costs: strong. Channel advantage: moderate, with direct relationships with large customers mattering more. Patent and technology barriers: strong, but patents are only the boundary; the real barrier is know-how. Data advantage: moderate, coming from historical design experience, verification results, and AI training scenarios. Culture and operating capability: strong, from long cultivation of EDA. Capital allocation capability: historically decent, but the Ansys acquisition has moved it into a "needs to prove itself" phase.

Fact: The moat is not equally deep across segments. In Q1 FY2026, the Design Automation segment's adjusted operating margin was 47%, while Design IP was only 16%. The company also candidly admits in its 10-K that FY2025 Design IP was dragged down by China export controls, lower-than-expected demand from a major foundry customer, and its own roadmap and resource allocation missteps, and it expects "muted growth" in that business in FY2026. This shows that the deepest moat is still in Design Automation, and Design IP is not of equal strength.

Inference: I therefore do not see the moat as "broadening across the board." I would rather define it as: Design Automation's moat is stable and on the wide side, and after consolidating Ansys the company's system-level capability may broaden its boundary over the long term; but Design IP's moat has been under pressure over the past two years. I score the overall moat at 4 out of 5, not 5 out of 5. In other words, the company is very strong, but not impregnable.

Inference: For a competitor to replicate Synopsys, the difficulty is not "building a single point tool" but building a systematic, full-flow toolchain that top customers will confidently adopt. That typically requires many years, sustained R&D investment on the order of several billion dollars, customer validation, coordination with foundries and ecosystem partners, and an accumulation of engineering talent. The regulators' conclusion on high barriers to entry reinforces this. My judgment is that a competitor can challenge locally on a given subsegment in the short term, but it is very hard to replicate the whole over the medium to long term.

Inference: In an inflationary environment the company most likely has some pricing power, because customers care more about "overall R&D efficiency and tape-out success rate" than the absolute price of a single license. But the company also states that customers tend to negotiate the total value of the overall arrangement rather than mechanically raising price per seat, so its pricing power is real but constrained by negotiations with large customers. In an economic downturn, EDA demand is usually steadier than upstream wafer equipment or downstream consumer electronics, because it is close to the R&D budget rather than end-market unit sales; but Design IP and hardware-related revenue are more sensitive.

Management and capital allocation

Fact: On governance, Synopsys currently has founder Aart de Geus as Executive Chair and Sassine Ghazi as CEO. The board discloses that after the annual meeting it will have 80% independent directors, fully independent committees, and a strong Lead Independent Director mechanism. From the public governance structure, this is a relatively mature and well-ordered board arrangement.

Fact: On alignment of interests, management ownership is not a "Buffett-style large personal bet," but it is not absent either. According to the 2026 proxy, de Geus holds about 589,800 shares, Ghazi holds about 200,800 shares, and CFO Shelagh Glaser holds about 35,500 shares. All current directors and officers together hold 1,074,600 shares, less than 1%. This shows management has some equity alignment, but not the very high ownership structure of "management and ordinary shareholders sharing the same fate to a high degree."

Fact: On compensation design, the proxy states clearly that most of management pay is tied to achieving business targets. In 2025 the CEO's annual equity incentive target value was raised to 18 million dollars, of which roughly 50% of the target value is allocated to PRSUs and the remaining half is split between RSUs and options. The company also has stock ownership guidelines, clawback, and prohibitions on executive hedging and pledging. In form, this system is long-term oriented.

Fact: The most important capital allocation move over the past two years is the 35 billion dollar acquisition of Ansys. To complete the deal, the company issued 10 billion dollars of senior notes in 2025 and drew on a 4.3 billion dollar term loan. By the end of FY2025, total debt was about 13.5 billion dollars. But in Q1 FY2026 the company prepaid the remaining 3.5 billion dollars of the term loan, terminating the term loan entirely; at the same time, in December 2025 it completed a private placement to NVIDIA of about 4.8 million shares, raising net proceeds of 2 billion dollars. This is a capital allocation path of "take on leverage to integrate, then deleverage quickly."

Inference: My assessment of capital allocation is "historically reasonably rational, currently in a critical proving period." On the positive side, management did not continue large buybacks after the acquisition but instead prioritized paying off the term loan, which is a plus for a conservative investor. The board also added 2 billion dollars of buyback authorization in February 2026, but as of Q1 FY2026 it had not deployed it aggressively, indicating that management at least did not blindly "dress up earnings per share" while debt pressure was still high. On the negative side, the Ansys deal is itself a high-risk, large capital allocation decision: it widened the moat's boundary but also raised complexity, amortization, interest, and dilution. Whether this decision ultimately creates or destroys value cannot be proven by a strategic narrative; it can only be proven by ROIC and real free cash flow over the next three to five years.

Fact: The company does not whitewash its risk communication. In its 10-K and 10-Q it discloses clearly the Design IP missteps, the impact of export controls, the major foundry customer issue, the restructuring plan under Ansys, and the 118.3 million dollars of restructuring charges in Q1 FY2026; the company expects total 2026 plan costs of about 300 million to 350 million dollars, with most layoffs occurring in FY2026. For a long-term investor, this disclosure style is more trustworthy than "talking only about the vision and never about the problems."

Opinion: All in, I score management and capital allocation at 3.5 out of 5. I credit its governance framework, succession arrangements, debt handling, and problem disclosure, but I will not lightly give a perfect score to the very large Ansys acquisition. It has the potential to become a highly successful capital allocation case, and it could also become the watershed where "an otherwise excellent business has its return quality dragged down by one oversized acquisition." At this stage, trust exists, but it requires continued verification.

Financial Quality and Owner Earnings

Financial quality

Two notes first. First, the continuing-operations basis from FY2023 to FY2025 is more comparable than headline historical revenue, because Software Integrity has been divested and Ansys was consolidated in 2025. Second, GAAP metrics in 2025 and 2026 are significantly distorted by acquisition amortization, integration costs, and debt interest, so looking at PE alone makes it easy to misjudge. In the table below I prioritize the data most useful to a long-term owner. In the table, 2023 to 2025 are on the FY2025 10-K comparable basis, Q1 FY2026 is the latest 10-Q, and TTM is my estimate based on the above data.

Metric FY2023 FY2024 FY2025 Q1 FY2026 TTM to 2026-01-31
Revenue 5.318 billion 6.127 billion 7.054 billion 2.409 billion 8.008 billion
Gross margin 80.6% 79.7% 77.0% 73.5% 75.1%
Operating margin 23.9% 22.1% 13.0% 8.4% 10.8%
Operating cash flow 1.703 billion 1.407 billion 1.519 billion 857 million 2.443 billion
Capital expenditure 190 million 140 million 169 million 35 million 164 million
Free cash flow 1.514 billion 1.268 billion 1.349 billion 822 million 2.279 billion
Stock-based compensation 563 million 692 million 893 million 259 million 966 million
Cash and short-term investments Not shown in this table 4.050 billion 2.961 billion 2.203 billion 2.203 billion
Total debt Not shown in this table 16 million 13.485 billion 10.044 billion 10.044 billion
Period-end shares About 154 million shares 154.1 million shares 186.0 million shares 191.4 million shares About 191.6 million shares

The most important thing in the table is not any single margin but three trends. First, revenue is growing steadily, with Q1 FY2026 lifted markedly by the consolidation of Ansys. Second, margins clearly declined after the acquisition, especially operating margin, because acquired-intangible amortization, restructuring charges, and interest all rose significantly. Third, operating cash flow and free cash flow are still very strong, showing that the business itself is not bleeding and that the distortion comes mainly from acquisition accounting and the financing structure.

Fact: Q1 FY2026 GAAP earnings of only 64.96 million dollars do not reflect a sudden collapse in the core business. Rather, in that single quarter the company recognized 248.2 million dollars of acquired-intangible amortization in cost of revenue, 156.0 million dollars of acquired-intangible amortization in operating expense, 118.3 million dollars of restructuring charges, and 162.7 million dollars of interest expense. In other words, GAAP earnings were sharply compressed by acquisition accounting and the financing structure, while non-cash generation was not compressed to the same degree.

Inference: This leads to a key judgment: there is now clear tension between Synopsys's "accounting earnings" and its "economic earnings." If you look only at PE, the company seems extremely expensive; if you look only at non-GAAP, it is easy to ignore the real amortization, leverage, and share dilution. For a long-term owner, the better approach is to look simultaneously at operating cash flow, capital expenditure, stock-based compensation, interest burden, and share count change. That is why I work through owner earnings below.

Fact: On the balance sheet, in Q1 FY2026 the company had 2.203 billion dollars of cash and short-term investments and 10.044 billion dollars of total debt, for net debt of about 7.84 billion dollars; debt has fallen from about 13.485 billion dollars at the end of FY2025. At the same time, the company's goodwill and intangible assets were 26.881 billion dollars and 12.290 billion dollars respectively, together far exceeding the tangible portion of shareholders' equity. In other words, deleveraging is happening, but the "asset quality" on the balance sheet depends heavily on the continued earning power of goodwill and intangibles.

Inference: As a rough calculation, using Q1 FY2026 period-end net debt and trailing-twelve-month EBITDA, net debt to EBITDA is around 4x; using trailing-twelve-month EBIT and interest, GAAP interest coverage is only about 1.5x. For a software leader that was once almost unleveraged, this is a clearly worse financial profile. Note, however, that this result is also distorted by acquisition accounting: large amortization does not equal cash flow disappearing. To be conservative, I still view the balance sheet as having declined from "extremely strong" to "acceptable but requiring continued monitoring."

Fact: On working capital, in FY2025 accounts receivable rose from 934 million dollars to 1.505 billion dollars, and further to 1.641 billion dollars in Q1 FY2026; inventory went from 362 million to 365 million and then to 393 million; accounts payable and accrued liabilities went from 1.164 billion to 1.326 billion and then to 1.305 billion. More importantly, deferred revenue rose from about 1.733 billion dollars (current plus long-term) in FY2024 to about 2.629 billion dollars in FY2025, and further to about 2.880 billion dollars in Q1 FY2026. This shows the business model still retains a strong "customer prepayment and contract visibility" character.

Fact: The change in share count should not be ignored. Period-end shares outstanding rose from 154.1 million shares in FY2024 to 186.0 million shares in FY2025 and then to 191.4 million shares in Q1 FY2026, mainly from the stock consideration in the Ansys deal and the December 2025 private placement to NVIDIA. At the same time, the company carried out almost no buybacks in FY2025 and no large buybacks in Q1 FY2026. For long-term shareholders this means: stock-based compensation and acquisition dilution are real costs and should not be ignored.

Opinion: The conclusion on financial quality is: there is no sign of fabricated earnings, but the accounting basis is now very "noisy"; cash flow is real money, though part of it is masked by stock-based compensation and restructuring and integration; growth itself does not require high capital expenditure but does require heavy R&D, acquisitions, and people; the company will not run into trouble immediately because of a short-term downturn, but it no longer has the near-unburdened financial flexibility it had before the acquisition. The greatest threat to "permanent capital loss" is not short-term volatility but buying high, integration falling short of expectations, and a valuation reset.

Owner earnings analysis

I use a conservative owner earnings basis. The reason is simple: Synopsys is a high-quality software company, so traditional FCF looks very pretty; but if you do not treat stock-based compensation as a real economic cost, it is easy to overstate the cash "distributable to existing shareholders." On that principle, my conservative trailing-four-quarter owner earnings estimate is as follows.

Conservative owner earnings estimate Amount
Trailing-twelve-month operating cash flow 2.443 billion dollars
Less: trailing-twelve-month capital expenditure 164 million dollars
Equals: trailing-twelve-month free cash flow 2.279 billion dollars
Less: trailing-twelve-month stock-based compensation 966 million dollars
Conservative owner earnings 1.313 billion dollars
Owner earnings per share about 6.85 dollars per share
Owner earnings multiple at current price about 76x

Assumption: Here I approximate "maintenance capital expenditure" as total capital expenditure, because Synopsys's physical capital expenditure is already very low; at the same time, I do not simply add back all acquired-intangible amortization, because the company's recent acquisitions are part of its operating reality rather than purely incidental events. This treatment is stricter than the common "CFO minus capex equals owner earnings."

Inference: On this basis Synopsys's true earning power is still good, but its distance from the stock price is not friendly. The current market cap of about 100.1 billion dollars corresponds to roughly 76x the conservative owner earnings above; even on a looser TTM FCF basis it is about 43.9x. Both numbers show that the market is not pricing it as a "mature, high-quality software stock" but as one expected to deliver "high growth for many years plus a successful integration." For a more conservative investor, this is the core valuation problem.

Inference: Are the earnings real cash earnings? My answer is: more than half is real, but you cannot use non-GAAP to represent all economic earnings. Operating cash flow and deferred revenue show the company can indeed collect cash; but at the same time stock-based compensation, acquisition amortization, the enormous intangible assets, and share dilution are also real economic costs. Rather than saying "GAAP understates it," it is closer to say "both GAAP and non-GAAP each tell only half the story." The most reliable approach for a long-term owner is to return to the owner earnings above.

Intrinsic Value, Margin of Safety, and Opportunity Comparison

Intrinsic value estimate

Of the three valuation methods below, I treat method one as the primary method, method two as a check, and method three as a floor judgment. Because the accounting distortion after the acquisition is large, any intrinsic value "precise to the dollar" is not credible; what is credible is a range.

Discounted owner earnings method

I ran a conservative two-stage exercise with three scenarios, built on just four core variables: starting owner earnings, the next ten years' compound growth rate, the discount rate, and the terminal growth rate. The "starting owner earnings" here is not a "fact" but an assumption based on the latest TTM cash flow, SBC, and integration progress.

Scenario Starting owner earnings assumption Next 10-year growth Discount rate Terminal growth My estimated intrinsic value per share
Conservative 1.35 billion dollars 8% 10% 3% 150 to 220 dollars
Neutral 1.7 to 1.8 billion dollars 10% 9% 3.5% 280 to 380 dollars
Optimistic 2.0 to 2.1 billion dollars 12% 8.5% 4% 430 to 520 dollars

Inference: Why is the range so wide? Because Synopsys's most sensitive variable right now is not revenue growth but how you view stock-based compensation, Ansys synergies, the decline in interest burden, and the amortization basis. If you believe the company can quickly lift owner earnings above 2 billion dollars in the coming years and maintain low-double-digit growth for a decade, then the current price is not unreasonable; but if, like me, you more conservatively factor in SBC and integration friction, then today's price is already very tight.

Relative valuation method

Fact: The market currently assigns Synopsys roughly 80.9x PE, Cadence about 87.1x PE, and Autodesk about 46.8x PE. From this angle Synopsys is not the most expensive relative to its direct peer Cadence, but it is not cheap relative to the broader software and engineering software space. More importantly, "all the peers are expensive" does not mean "it is cheap."

Inference: By my rough calculation off the latest 10-Q, Synopsys currently corresponds to about 43.9x TTM FCF, about 56x TTM EV/EBITDA, and a book P/B of about 3.3x. But both EV/EBITDA and P/B have limits here: the former is distorted by the accounting structure of the integration period, and the latter is diluted in its reference value by enormous goodwill and intangibles. So my conclusion on the relative valuation method is: relative to Cadence it is merely "not as absurd," but relative to long-term free cash flow it is still on the expensive side, and you must never claim a margin of safety just because the peers are also expensive.

Asset or liquidation value method

Fact: In Q1 FY2026 the company's shareholders' equity was about 30.548 billion dollars, while goodwill and intangible assets together were about 39.170 billion dollars. This means the company's tangible net assets are negative, or at least very close to negative. For a good software company this is not unusual; but it also means a harsh fact: Synopsys has no obvious "liquidation value cushion." Your investment logic must rest on "going concern plus a persistent moat," not on liquidating assets.

Opinion: So the intrinsic value ranges I provide are as follows: Conservative intrinsic value range: 150 to 220 dollars. Fair intrinsic value range: 280 to 380 dollars. Optimistic intrinsic value range: 430 to 520 dollars. At the current price of about 524.74 dollars, the market price sits roughly at the upper edge of the optimistic range, or even slightly above it, which means: either you view the next decade of owner earnings more optimistically than I do, or the current price lacks a margin of safety.

My view on the buy range is correspondingly clear: Ideal buy price range: 300 to 380 dollars. Acceptable holding price range: 380 to 500 dollars. Clearly overvalued range: above 500 dollars. This does not mean the company definitely will not rise above 500 dollars; it means that for new capital that is long-term, value-oriented, and conservative, the odds are not good enough.

Margin of safety and comparison with other opportunities

Conclusion: the margin of safety at the current price is insufficient. The most fragile valuation assumption is not "whether revenue will keep growing" but "whether owner earnings can recover quickly after the integration period and keep growing fast, while the market remains willing to pay a high multiple for the long term." If even one of those conditions fails, the return is meaningfully marked down.

Fact: The US Treasury's 10-year yield on May 22, 2026 was about 4.56%. By comparison, by my rough calculation above, SNPS's current TTM FCF yield is about 2.3%, and its conservative owner earnings yield is only about 1.3%. This means that buying SNPS today is essentially accepting a starting cash yield clearly below the risk-free rate, with all of the excess return resting on many years of high growth ahead. For a more conservative investor, this is not an ideal starting point.

Inference: Compared with its strongest competitor Cadence, Synopsys's advantages are a wider business boundary, the system-level space opened up by Ansys, and a current PE slightly below Cadence's; its disadvantages are integration risk, leverage aftereffects, and a more complex set of financial statements. Compared with an S&P 500 ETF, Synopsys's business moat may be deeper, but its current valuation also demands more of future performance, while the index at least gives you diversification and no single integration-failure risk. If you ask me "is buying it clearly better than buying the index," at the current price my answer is: not clearly.

Opinion: If I could hold only five assets, I would say: on enterprise quality it is close to qualifying; on price it does not qualify for now. Capital is scarce, and good value investing is not "buy because you like the company" but "buy only when the odds are good enough." Today's Synopsys is more like a name that belongs at the front of the candidate list, waiting for a better price.

Risk, Checklist, and Final Investment Conclusion

Key risks and the strongest bear case

The most important risks, viewed through the "permanent capital loss" framework, fall into six categories.

The first is valuation risk. Even if the company stays a good company, if growth over the next decade comes in slightly below expectations, if the integration falls short, or if the market pulls the multiple back from today's high, investors could face long-term low returns or even years of making no money. This is the most realistic risk right now.

The second is acquisition integration risk. Ansys makes the company stronger but also more complex. At the end of FY2025 Ansys already accounted for about 21% of the company's total assets and about 11% of FY2025 revenue, and the company's internal control audit explicitly excluded Ansys from the FY2025 ICFR assessment; Q1 FY2026 was still undergoing large-scale restructuring, with planned total costs of 300 million to 350 million dollars. If culture, product roadmap, sales organization, cost synergies, or cross-selling fall short, this deal could dilute rather than enhance intrinsic value.

The third is Design IP repair risk. The company has stated plainly that this segment faces export controls, a weakening major foundry customer, and its own roadmap and resource allocation missteps. In Q1 FY2026 the segment's adjusted margin was only 16%, far below Design Automation's 47%. If Design IP cannot be repaired over the long term, that is not just a segment problem; it would also affect the market's confidence in the entire platform story.

The fourth is geopolitical and China risk. FY2025 China revenue was about 814 million dollars, below FY2024's 990 million dollars; the company states clearly that export controls have already had a negative impact on its China business and Design IP and may continue to do so. Even if some restrictions are lifted, this risk will not vanish entirely, because both customers and governments may push for domestic substitution.

The fifth is financial leverage and amortization noise risk. Although the company prepaid the 3.5 billion dollar term loan in Q1, it still carries about 10 billion dollars of senior notes on the balance sheet; meanwhile, future acquired-intangible amortization is estimated to reach as much as 1.613 billion dollars in 2026. This will not cause an immediate liquidity crisis, but it will suppress GAAP ROIC, GAAP EPS, and market tolerance over the long term.

The sixth is industry competition and technology change risk. No matter how deep the moat, EDA and engineering simulation are not static moats. Cadence, Siemens, domestic substitution, customer in-house development, and shifts in AI toolchains could all erode share in local subsegments. Both the regulators and the company itself acknowledge that the relevant markets evolve quickly.

The strongest bear case can be stated this way:

This is not a "buy a great EDA leader" investment, but a "buy at an extremely high valuation a company that just completed an oversized acquisition, had its financials restructured, had its share count diluted, and had its core high-margin business diluted by a more complex business" investment. If over the next three years Ansys synergies come in below expectations, Design IP repair lags expectations, China disruption recurs, and the market refuses to grant such a high multiple, then even if the company remains an excellent enterprise, shareholder returns could clearly lag the index.

I believe that once the following facts appear, one should admit the original judgment was wrong and reassess: backlog growth stalls or clearly weakens; Design Automation core revenue growth lags large customers' R&D spending for several consecutive quarters; Design IP margins stay low for the long term without repair; the decline in net debt stalls and interest expense stays high; a major customer shifts to a competitor or in-house substitute; China restrictions escalate again and create a sustained revenue gap.

Investment checklist

Check item Conclusion
Can I understand this business Pass
Does it have stable long-term demand Pass
Does it have a durable moat Pass
Does it have pricing power Pass, but constrained by large-customer bargaining
Can it generate stable free cash flow Pass
Is its return on capital excellent Uncertain, currently severely distorted by the acquisition basis
Is management trustworthy Pass, but integration execution needs continued verification
Is capital allocation rational Uncertain
Is the balance sheet solid Uncertain, clearly weaker than before the acquisition
Is the valuation below intrinsic value Fail
Is the margin of safety sufficient Fail
Does long-term ownership let me rest easy The enterprise itself yes; the current buy price not reassuring
What facts would make me sell Moat narrowing, integration failure, debt rigidity, customer loss, Design Automation core stalling
Am I just wanting to buy because of price action or emotion It is easy to fall into this trap now, and one should be wary

Final investment conclusion

[Final Rating] Watch

[One-Sentence Investment Thesis] Synopsys is a high-quality, deep-moat engineering software leader, but the current price looks like it is prepaying for a decade of success rather than leaving a margin of safety for new investors.

[Core Bull Points]

  • The EDA core sits in a high-barrier, high-stickiness, oligopolistic quality space.

  • About 70% of revenue is recognized on a time-based or maintenance and service basis, and FY2025 backlog reached 11.4 billion dollars, giving high revenue visibility.

  • Capital expenditure is light and operating cash flow is strong; the business model itself is high quality.

  • After consolidating Ansys, the "silicon to systems" system-level capability widens the long-term growth boundary.

  • Management has, on the whole, remained rational on debt handling, governance structure, and risk disclosure.

[Core Bear Points]

  • The current valuation is high: about 80.9x PE, about 43.9x TTM FCF, and about 76x conservative owner earnings.

  • The oversized Ansys acquisition raised complexity, interest burden, and accounting noise.

  • Share count rose from 154 million shares in FY2024 to 191 million shares in Q1 FY2026, so dilution is real.

  • Design IP's current operating performance is on the weaker side; not every business line is equally excellent.

  • China and export control risks have not gone away.

[Key Assumptions]

  • The Design Automation core keeps growing at a high single digit to low double digit rate.

  • The Ansys integration does not damage existing gross margin or cash flow quality and gradually releases synergies.

  • Design IP gradually recovers in 2026 to 2027 rather than continuing to be a drag.

  • Leverage keeps declining, with no new large acquisition re-adding leverage.

  • Key markets, especially China, do not see more severe and sustained restriction shocks.

[Fair Buy Price] 300 to 380 dollars per share. Basis: this is my execution range derived from the neutral intrinsic value range of 280 to 380 dollars plus a certain quality premium; if you insist on a wider margin of safety, the buy point should be lower. The current 524.74 dollars does not meet this requirement.

[Target Holding Period] Ten years or more. This assumes a reasonable buy price, because the real value of a high-quality engineering software company like this usually comes from long-term compounding rather than short-term valuation swings.

[Expected Annualized Return] This is an opinion and a valuation inference, not a fact. Taking the current stock price as the starting point and estimating roughly over a ten-year horizon:

  • Conservative scenario: -1% to 3%.

  • Neutral scenario: 4% to 7%.

  • Optimistic scenario: 8% to 11%. The reason it is not higher is that the current buy price is already very high, so future returns must depend on sustained high growth and on the high multiple not contracting significantly.

[Maximum Loss Risk] If the Ansys integration goes poorly, Design IP stays weak, export controls recur, and the market re-rates the valuation closer to the range of a mature high-quality software company, then a decline from the current price back to my conservative intrinsic value range is not impossible, and a drop of 40% to 60% or even more would not be an exaggeration. The worst case is not short-term volatility but "buying high and then having years of return swallowed by valuation reversion."

[Tracking Metrics]

  • Design Automation's organic revenue growth

  • Design IP's revenue and margin repair

  • Total backlog and the conversion ratio over the next 12 months

  • Changes in deferred revenue

  • Operating cash flow and FCF

  • SBC as a share of revenue and the change in share count

  • The pace of decline in net debt and interest expense

  • Ansys integration costs and synergy realization

  • China revenue and changes in export controls

  • Demand signals related to key large customers and foundries

[Signals That Trigger Reassessment]

  • Backlog clearly deteriorates or renewal quality declines

  • Design Automation core margin keeps weakening

  • Design IP recovery lags expectations for several consecutive quarters

  • The reduction in net debt stalls

  • A large customer is lost or customer in-house substitution strengthens

  • China restrictions escalate and create a sustained revenue gap

  • Management returns to a path of large, high-priced acquisitions

  • The gap between non-GAAP and GAAP keeps widening without clear cash verification

[Final Recommendation] To put it calmly and with restraint: this is an excellent enterprise worth respecting and tracking for the long term, but it is not a name suitable for conservative long-term capital to "buy heavily" at the current price. If you already own it at a low cost basis, you can keep tracking the integration and cash flow realization; if you are new capital, I would rather you place it on a high-priority watch list and wait for better odds, instead of accepting a "good company but bad price" entry just because it is a "good company."

Information Boundaries and Open Questions

This report is based on the latest filed FY2025 10-K and the 10-Q through 2026-01-31 at the time of writing. Because the company has just been through a major acquisition and divestiture, fully comparable data over a longer time span is not clean; in addition, the official Q2 FY2026 results are not yet included here. On top of that, since Siemens EDA is not a separately listed company and Ansys has already been consolidated into Synopsys, directly comparable public companies are inherently limited. Therefore, the strongest conclusions here center on high business quality, a deep moat, and an insufficient margin of safety at the current price, while what most needs continued updating is the degree of Ansys integration realization and the true cash flow quality for full-year 2026.

This report is based on public information and does not constitute investment advice. Markets carry risk; invest with caution.

EDAEngineering SoftwareAnsys IntegrationSemiconductor DesignValue Investing
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