Anthropic is preparing to launch an AI-powered tool for creating websites and presentations alongside Claude Opus 4.7, its next flagship model, according to a person familiar with the products who spoke to The Information. Both could ship as soon as this week. The design tool is the more consequential product: it automates workflows that currently require Figma, Wix, or Adobe, and the market is already pricing in the displacement.

Figma and Wix shares declined on Monday, April 13, following the announcement, according to Dataconomy. India Today reported that the tool is “already crashing Adobe and Figma stocks.” The S&P 500 Software and Services Index has fallen nearly 26% year-to-date, with Anthropic’s prior launches, including the Claude Cowork assistant and automation plugins, having triggered “considerable selloffs in software stocks” earlier in 2026, per Dataconomy.

Design Workflow Automation Arrives

The design tool represents Anthropic’s expansion into visual and creative automation. Anthropic has already partnered with Figma to convert AI-generated code into editable design files and integrated Claude into Microsoft Word and PowerPoint, Dataconomy reported. A dedicated tool for websites and presentations takes that integration further: instead of augmenting existing design software, Anthropic is building a replacement.

The stock market reaction signals something structural. Creative and design software workflows are entering the same autonomous displacement curve that document, code, and data workflows entered in 2024 and 2025. When investors see an AI lab ship a tool that can produce websites and presentations, they do not treat it as a feature launch. They treat it as a category threat.

Opus 4.7: The Commercial Model

Claude Opus 4.7 is the commercial successor to Opus 4.6, which launched in February 2026 with a one-million-token context window and “agent teams” capability. Opus 4.7 is distinct from Claude Mythos, the more powerful model Anthropic has restricted to Project Glasswing partners for defensive cybersecurity applications.

Anthropic’s dual-track strategy is now explicit: Opus 4.7 serves as the commercial mainstream release while Mythos remains gated, expected to unveil publicly at a San Francisco event in May, according to Dataconomy.

Internal references to Opus 4.7 have circulated for weeks. The model’s meta description references “industry-leading” performance across agentic coding, computer use, tool use, search, and finance, the five core agent capability categories, per The Tech Portal.

What the Stock Reaction Tells Builders

The pattern is now clear enough to name: every time an AI lab ships a tool that automates a vertical workflow, the incumbent software companies in that vertical lose market capitalization before the product even reaches users. Anthropic’s design tool has not launched. Nobody outside Anthropic has tested it. The stock market is pricing in the probability of displacement, not the certainty.

For teams building on Claude’s API, Opus 4.7 is the more immediately relevant product. If it maintains Opus 4.6’s million-token context and agent teams while improving the core model, agent builders get a direct upgrade path. The design tool matters for a different audience: the product teams and marketers who still open Figma or Canva to build a landing page.