After a rough week on Wall Street, there’s a certain silence. It’s more like collective breath-holding than panic. That’s essentially the current environment surrounding Fig stock as investors attempt to determine whether what they’re witnessing is a transient decline or something more lasting.
Figma had significant momentum when it went public in July of last year. The company created a browser-based collaborative design tool that many creative teams found to be just as important as email, something that designers truly loved. Each share was priced at $33 during the IPO. The stock was trading close to $143 in a matter of weeks. Companies that people have doubts about don’t go through that kind of run. When the market truly believes, it takes place.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Figma, Inc. |
| Stock Ticker | FIG |
| Exchange | NYSE |
| IPO Date | July 2024 |
| IPO Price | $33 per share |
| Post-IPO High | $142.92 |
| Current Price (Apr 2025) | ~$20.42–$24.50 |
| 52-Week Range | $19.85 – $142.92 |
| 2025 Revenue | $1.06 Billion (↑41% YoY) |
| 2025 Net Loss | $1.25 Billion |
| Net Dollar Retention | 136% |
| CEO | Dylan Field |
| Headquarters | San Francisco, California |
| Primary Product | Collaborative UI/UX Design Platform |
| Failed Acquisition | Adobe attempted $20B buyout (terminated 2023) |
| Reference Website | Figma Investor Relations |
The slide then appeared. Fig stock is currently trading between $20 and $24 depending on the day, having lost about 80% of its post-IPO peak. The decline did not occur in a single, spectacular crash. It happened gradually, then more quickly, then all at once, just like most confidence erodes.
Things picked up a lot of speed this past Wednesday. Google unveiled “vibe designing”—a prompt-based method where users type a description and the system creates polished interface designs and front-end code without touching a wireframe—as well as updates to Stitch, its AI-powered UI design tool. That day, fig stock dropped about 8%. Another 4-5% drop occurred on Thursday. Apparently, Wall Street didn’t wait for a product comparison. The name Google was sufficient on its own.
That reaction might have been overdone. In terms of enterprise rollout, Stitch is still in its early stages, free, and uncertain. However, investors have witnessed this pattern before: a tech giant stealthily enters a nearby market, integrates its new tool into an ecosystem that is already in use by millions of businesses, and the incumbent is suddenly forced to defend its price tag in a manner it has never done before. It’s more than just a product announcement when Google integrates Stitch with Docs, Drive, and Workspace. It’s a method of distribution. That distinction is important.
The fact that the underlying company isn’t failing is what really complicates the Fig stock story. Not at all. The company’s revenue for 2025 was $1.06 billion, up 41% from the previous year. With a net dollar retention rate of 136%, current clients are not only sticking around but also increasing their spending. These are the numbers of a business that is performing well. The product is effective when current users continue to open their wallets.
However, losses are growing at the same rate. In 2025, net losses increased from $732 million to $1.25 billion. Operating costs and stock-based compensation continue to rise, and there isn’t yet a discernible turning point. As this develops, it appears that Figma is investing heavily in defense of its current position, which is distinct from growth investment. The tension between those two narratives—strong revenue growth on one side and accelerating losses on the other—is difficult to ignore.
The unsuccessful acquisition of Adobe continues to have a lasting impact. Adobe attempted to purchase Figma for $20 billion in 2023. The deal fell through after regulators blocked it due to antitrust issues, and Figma eventually pursued an IPO. Silently, some analysts have questioned whether that acquisition would have been the better course of action for shareholders rather than the design community. The market capitalization of the company is now significantly less than what Adobe was prepared to pay three years ago. This fact is not overlooked.
In a February CNBC interview, Figma’s CEO, Dylan Field, seemed to be genuinely calm about the stock’s volatility. He claimed that over time, volatility tends to make businesses stronger. It makes sense to say that, and it may even be accurate. However, it also sounds like something you say when you are at a loss for a better response. Long-term philosophy is currently of little interest to the market.
There is disagreement among analysts about the future direction of Fig stock. Based on projected cash flows, the DCF models indicate that the shares may be trading at a 23.8% discount to intrinsic value, suggesting a fair value closer to $26.79. However, the narrative-based valuation framework suggests that the stock is somewhat overpriced at current levels and estimates fair value at about $18.79.
That split is not typical. Real numbers are used in both analyses. They simply weigh the risks differently, and the risk that most obviously separates them is AI—that is, whether tools like Stitch and whatever comes after Stitch will reduce Figma’s pricing power before the business achieves long-term profitability.
Whether Google is truly committed to Stitch as a long-term enterprise product or if this is just early testing is still up for debate. Google’s history with tools that it introduces and then discontinues is complicated. However, the company is also well-funded, widely distributed, and has a track record of bundling free features into paid ecosystems until the competition is exhausted. Serious investors are cautious because of this combination.
The stock of figs hasn’t returned to its low from early February, which some saw as a potential floor. Execution—improving margins, delivering genuine user value through AI integration, and maintaining growth above 25% over a year that isn’t getting any easier—will determine whether that floor holds. There is no room for surprises because the stock is priced for consistent performance. That’s a narrow path to walk in the current environment.
There’s a sense that the true story will be revealed in the upcoming quarters. The real data, the real user behavior, the real competitive reaction—not the headlines, the Google announcements, or the analyst models. Figma created something truly practical. Investors in Fig stock are literally paying to find out if that’s sufficient.

