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**TL;DR:** Every AI company is fighting over text and image training data, but the only company that owns enough professional 3D design data to train physical-world AI models, and is actually willing to use it, is Autodesk. They're building foundation models on decades of CAD data, and the market hasn't connected the dots yet. Zero DD posts on this sub. Current price \~$240, forward non-GAAP P/E of 19x, PEG near 1.
# The Setup: AI Hits a Wall
Two weeks ago on Lenny's Podcast, Caitlin Kalinowski laid out the problem. Kalinowski was technical lead on the MacBook Air and Mac Pro at Apple, built every Oculus Rift and Quest headset at Meta, and ran OpenAI's robotics division until she quit over the defense deal. Here's what she said:
>"Right now, we're right at the very, very beginning of AI being able to do CAD. Claude can do what is essentially surfaces or point clouds. This is not real CAD."
She explained that current LLMs don't understand friction, weight, contact pressure, or surface texture. They can write code and generate images, but they cannot design a physical object that actually works in the real world. A bracket that looks right but has wall sections too thin for injection molding isn't a bracket. It's a rendering.
Then she dropped the line that matters for this thesis:
>"The biggest challenge here is actually the data. This CAD data is some of the most valuable IP that anybody has. Samsung, they're not going to want to give their 3D CAD to a model vendor. This is proprietary. This is the secret sauce. So where is this data going to come from is a big question I have."
She said you're going to need a base model trained on massive amounts of CAD data, and that it will probably require entirely new model types, not LLMs, to make it work.
# Who Has the Data?
Autodesk holds over 25% of the global CAD software market. Combined with their other products (Revit, Inventor, Fusion, Forma), they touch architecture, engineering, construction, and manufacturing. Hundreds of millions of professional designs have been created in their tools over decades. They have the largest corpus of professional 3D design data on the planet.
At Autodesk University 2025, they announced **Neural CAD**: a new category of foundation models trained specifically on professional design data, built as a new model architecture that reasons directly about CAD geometry, shapes, components, manufacturing constraints, and building layouts rather than wrapping an LLM around existing software.
Their chief scientist described commissioning designers to create "gold standard" training data: fully constrained, annotated models built specifically to train these models at a quality level beyond what normal customers produce. They're also using customer data (with permission controls) and synthetic data. In the future, enterprise customers will be able to fine-tune the models on their own proprietary data in a sandboxed environment where nothing leaks into the global training set.
Kalinowski described the exact product Autodesk is building without naming them. The market hasn't connected these two things.
# Why Nobody Else Can Do This
**Dassault Systèmes (SolidWorks, CATIA):** The obvious competitor. They have the data. They also have revenue growth of 0.36% in 2025, a contracting life sciences division from the Medidata acquisition they can't divest, weak European automotive exposure, and a stock that dropped 20% in a single day in February on their worst earnings miss ever. They're cleaning house and managing a platform migration. They are not shipping AI foundation models. Their SolidWorks 2026 AI features are incremental.
**Siemens (NX, Solid Edge):** Acquired Altair for $10.6B to get simulation AI, yet Siemens is a massive industrial conglomerate where the CAD/PLM division is a fraction of total revenue. You can't buy "AI transforms CAD" through Siemens without also buying trains and power grids.
**PTC (Creo, Onshape):** Onshape is cloud-native, which is good architecture for AI, though PTC is smaller, has less training data, and hasn't announced anything comparable to Neural CAD.
**Startups (Zoo/KittyCAD, Adam AI, DraftAid, Leo AI):** Interesting technology but they do not have the data. Zoo's text-to-CAD generates basic B-rep geometry from prompts, which is cool for hobbyists. Production engineering with tolerances, material constraints, and manufacturing feasibility requires training data from millions of real professional designs. Startups don't have it.
Kalinowski specifically said hobbyists will be the starting point for AI CAD because they don't care about IP. That's the startup market. The enterprise market, where the actual revenue is, requires the kind of data only Autodesk has at scale.
# MaintainX Acquisition
Yesterday, alongside Q1 FY2027 earnings, Autodesk announced a $3.6B acquisition of MaintainX. The market read it as overpaying (which is accurate, and I don't know why they paid so much more than what the previous highest bid was) and sold the stock. Nonetheless, it's actually the final piece of a closed-loop data strategy.
Right now, the design-to-operate lifecycle has gaps. You design something in CAD. You build it. Then the maintenance data, what broke, what wore out, what needed redesign, lives in a completely separate system. MaintainX is a connected worker and asset management platform used by maintenance teams in manufacturing, facilities, and field operations.
By owning the full loop (design in Fusion/Revit → build → operate/maintain in MaintainX → feed failure data back into design), Autodesk gets something nobody else has: real-world performance data that can train their AI models to design things that actually last. CEO Anagnost described this as advancing digital twins "from static to dynamic" and unlocking a **$40 billion TAM**.
The acquisition is a data play disguised as an operations expansion.
# Financials
**Q1 FY2027 (reported yesterday, May 28):**
* Revenue: $1.93B, up 18% YoY, beat estimates of $1.89B
* Non-GAAP EPS: $2.99, beat estimates of $2.84
* Free cash flow: $876M
* GAAP operating margin: 28%, up 14 percentage points YoY
* Raised full year FY2027 revenue guidance to $8.155B-$8.215B
* Raised full year non-GAAP EPS guidance to $12.40-$12.65
**Valuation at \~$240/share:**
* Market cap: \~$50B
* Trailing non-GAAP P/E: \~25x
* Forward non-GAAP P/E: \~19x
* PEG ratio: \~1.0
* EV/FCF: \~21x
**Consensus estimates:**
* FY2027 non-GAAP EPS: \~$12.69
* FY2028 non-GAAP EPS: \~$13.43
* FY2029 non-GAAP EPS: \~$14.37
Remaining performance obligations (contracted future revenue) sit at $7.8B, up 9% YoY, with current RPO up 18%.
# Bear Case: Neural CAD is Vaporware (~$220, roughly flat)
AI features remain incremental. Neural CAD stays in beta and doesn't drive measurable ARPU increases. MaintainX integration is messy and dilutive for 2+ years. Revenue growth decelerates from 18% to 8-10% as the billing transition tailwind fades. Macro headwinds hit construction and manufacturing spend. SolidWorks and Siemens ship competitive AI features. Forward P/E compresses from 19x to 16x on slowing growth.
FY2029 EPS lands around $13.50. At 16x forward, stock trades around $215-$220.
You don't lose much money here because the base business is genuinely strong with 18% growth, expanding margins, and a $3.5B+ annual FCF run rate. The floor is a well-run subscription software company at a reasonable multiple.
# Base Case: AI Drives Upsell, Not Revolution (~$350-$380)
Neural CAD ships broadly in Fusion and Forma by late 2026/early 2027. Enterprises start adopting it as a productivity tool. Autodesk introduces AI-tiered pricing, charging more for AI-assisted design features. Average revenue per user increases 10-15% over 3 years on top of normal price increases. MaintainX integration goes reasonably well and adds $200-300M in annual revenue by FY2029. Total revenue growth sustains at 13-15%.
FY2029 EPS hits $16-17. Market recognizes Autodesk as an AI beneficiary and assigns a slight premium, 22-24x forward. Stock trades $350-$380.
This is roughly in line with the current analyst consensus price target of \~$330 plus some upside from the AI narrative catching on.
# Bull Case: New TAM ($500-$600+)
This is where it gets interesting. Think about what happens if Neural CAD actually works the way Autodesk describes: generating production-ready CAD geometry from text, sketches, or voice prompts, validated against real-world physics and manufacturing constraints.
**The current CAD market is \~$12-13B.** That market is defined by the number of people who know how to use CAD software. There are maybe 8-10 million professional CAD users worldwide.
If AI reduces the skill barrier to designing physical objects, the addressable market isn't "CAD software." It's "anyone who needs to design something physical," including product managers sketching on whiteboards, maintenance technicians who know what broke but can't design the fix, small manufacturers who outsource design because they can't afford a mechanical engineer, and architects who spend 60% of their time on documentation instead of design.
Kalinowski described this future explicitly: "If you could say, hey, I want to build this thing and I want it to do this and here's kind of how I want it to look and here's a picture... the idea that you could even as a hobbyist go from a 2D picture to complex 3D CAD to assemblies to communication with vendors... that is possible in the future."
Autodesk's CEO put a number on the expanded TAM with MaintainX: $40B. That's 3x the current CAD market. And even that might be conservative if AI-assisted design becomes as accessible as AI-assisted writing is today.
In the bull case: Neural CAD becomes a platform, not just a feature. Autodesk charges consumption-based pricing for AI-generated designs. The MaintainX data loop creates a defensible flywheel where more usage produces better AI, which produces more usage. Revenue growth re-accelerates to 20%+ as the new TAM opens up. Third-party developers build on Autodesk's Neural CAD API (they've already announced MCP infrastructure for this).
FY2029 EPS hits $18-20 as operating leverage kicks in. Market assigns a 28-32x multiple because this is now a platform company with a data moat and expanding TAM, similar to how Adobe re-rated during the Creative Cloud transition.
Stock trades $500-$600+. From $240 today, 2x or better.
# Why This Isn't Priced In
There are zero Autodesk DD posts on this subreddit. The stock dropped on the MaintainX acquisition announcement despite beating on every financial metric. Analyst price targets average $330, based on traditional software valuation, not the AI platform thesis. The 33 analysts covering this stock are modeling revenue growth deceleration, not TAM expansion.
The Kalinowski interview aired May 17. She described the problem. Autodesk announced their answer 8 months ago. Nobody has connected these two publicly in a way that reaches retail investors.
The market is pricing Autodesk as a mature enterprise software company that grows 10-15% and trades at 19-22x forward earnings. If Neural CAD works, that framing is wrong.
# Risks
**MaintainX integration risk.** $3.6B is a lot. Acquisitions go wrong frequently. If integration is botched, it's dilutive for years and distracts management from the AI opportunity.
**Neural CAD execution.** It's early. The demos are impressive but it's still in limited release. Foundation models for physical design are harder than text or image models. This could take 3-5 years longer than bulls expect.
**Competition from foundation model labs.** OpenAI, Google, or Anthropic could build world models that handle physical design. Kalinowski hinted at this. If a general-purpose world model can do CAD, Autodesk's data moat matters less.
**Valuation.** Even at 19x forward non-GAAP, you're paying a premium relative to the software sector median of \~21x trailing GAAP. If growth disappoints, the multiple compresses and the stock goes nowhere for years.
**Stock-based compensation.** The gap between GAAP and non-GAAP earnings is real dilution. \~$1B+ annually in stock-based-compensation means your ownership is being diluted every year.
**Macro.** Architecture, engineering, and construction spending is cyclical. A recession hits Autodesk's core customer base directly.
**Position:** 22 shares ADSK @ $230.86, entered 5/29/2026. Planning to add more if it dips further.
**Disclosure:** This is not financial advice. I'm a random person on the internet who listened to a podcast and read some SEC filings. Do your own research.