Skip to main content

Cisco Forecasts Growth for First Time in Downturn

ciscoCisco Systems Inc. is forecasting revenue growth for the first time in a year, offering further evidence that orders are rising again after passing what CEO John Chambers called a “tipping point” in the downturn this summer.

The world’s No. 1 maker of computer-networking gear said Wednesday that given the brightening conditions, it will start to hire more employees after laying off workers over the past year. Cisco’s work force has shrunk by about 3,500 over the past four quarters to about 63,800, mostly from layoffs but also from early retirement offers and attrition.

Recommended Videos

Chambers said during a conference call with analysts that the hiring will be “very targeted” and focused on new markets.thumb-ci

Cisco‘s results are seen as a gauge of how large corporations and government agencies and Internet providers are managing their technology budgets. The downturn has caused them to rein in spending on such Cisco mainstays as routers and switches, a trend that is still hurting Cisco but is easing as rising data traffic from Internet video and other applications strain existing computing equipment.

Cisco executives urged caution, though. They said sales could still sputter if the economic recovery falters.

“There’s still uncertainty in the economy on a global basis,” Cisco’s chief financial officer, Frank Calderoni, said in an interview. “It’s not completely back to normal levels, and with that kind of uncertainty, you really have to take things quarter by quarter.”

The company’s expansion into markets outside its core routing and switching businesses poses one threat to Cisco in the form of lower profit margins.

Cisco is entering the computer-server market, where it will compete with longtime partners Hewlett-Packard Co. and IBM Corp. It is also expanding its product line to include consumer gadgets.

Cisco recently bought Pure Digital, which makes the popular Flip Video camera. Cisco has been on an acquisition binge, announcing last month a $3 billion deal for Norway’s Tandberg ASA, which makes videoconferencing equipment, and a $2.9 billion deal for Starent Networks Corp., a maker of equipment for wireless carriers.

Cisco’s forecast is for revenue growth of 1 percent to 4 percent in the current quarter, which ends in January. That would translate to revenue of $9.2 billion to $9.5 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were expecting a decline from last year.

Cisco reported Wednesday after the market closed that its net income dropped 19 percent to $1.8 billion, or 30 cents per share. Revenue fell 13 percent to $9 billion.

Wall Street was expecting even steeper declines, though. Excluding one-time charges, Cisco earned 36 cents per share, ahead of estimates for 31 cents per share in net income, on that same basis. Cisco’s shares climbed 82 cents, or 3.5 percent, to $24.11 in extended trading. In regular trading earlier, it gained 31 cents, or 1.4 percent, to close at $23.22.

Cisco, based in San Jose, also announced that its board approved $10 billion more for stock buybacks, lifting the total amount available under that and previous plans to $13.1 billion.

Dena Cassella
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Haole built. O'ahu grown
Think it’s time to upgrade your gaming CPU? Read this first
time to upgrade gaming cpu read this first respec

We're on the edge of a new generation of gaming CPUs -- 13th-gen Raptor Lake from Intel and Ryzen 7000 from AMD. If you're reading this on the day it's published, in fact, AMD is set to launch it's next-gen processors tomorrow. But should you care?

AMD and Intel will undoubtedly both come out claiming ownership over the best gaming CPU, but testing consistently shows that gaming CPU upgrades don't have the biggest impact on your frame rate. There's a lot going on in the next generation of processors, so I'm going to help break down how to understand your CPU's role in games and how you can determine when it's time for an upgrade.
A layman's guide to CPU bottlenecks

Read more
Brain-computer interfaces have been implanted in humans for the first time
brain computer interfaces implanted in humans for the first time synchron bci stentrode and io

A Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) is now in clinical trials on human patients, the first time this has ever happened in the United States. With all of the buzz around Neuralink, one might expect this breakthrough would come from Elon Musk's moonshot company. However, the honor goes to a lesser-known brain interface technology leader, Synchron, and its Stentrode device.

While flashy claims of BCIs allowing VR games without a headset and amplifying human intelligence might make headlines, those are distant dreams. Meanwhile, tangible solutions to medical problems that affect patients today are being addressed by Synchron and other BCI innovators.

Read more
For the first time in 14 years, AMD beats Intel in PassMark desktop market share
http://s3.amazonaws.com/digitaltrends-uploads-prod/2018/10/samsung-chg90-ultrawide-monitor-review-5481.jpg

Intel briefly fell behind AMD in the desktop CPU market share, according to new data from the benchmarking firm, PassMark. AMD at one point had a near 1.6% lead over its rival Intel in total analyzed systems before the AMD lead fell to a near 0.4% gain for Intel a day later.

According to the data, at one point, on January 4, AMD's share in PassMark's benchmarking tests was at 50.08%, whereas, Intel's was standing at 49.2%. The numbers have since switched back to favor Intel, with the chipmaker standing above at a 50.2% lead over AMD's 49.8% at the time of publishing on January 5.

Read more