Five key partner takeaways from Cisco's Q3 results

Doug Woodburn
clock • 4 min read

We've sifted through networking giant's Q3 results statement and call transcript, so you don't have to

Cisco is back in growth mode, but investors want more

Just like IBM, Cisco has finally returned to growth mode, logging its second straight quarter of year-on-year growth in Q3 ending 28 April 2018.

But although revenue growth of four per cent was in line with expectations, Wall Street was apparently a little underwhelmed by the networking giant's guidance for Q4, when it expects to grow by between four and six per cent.

Cisco's shares dipped four per cent in the aftermath of its earnings announcement.

A gentle slide in Cisco's share price this week has halted a bull run that saw it hit it hit a 17-year high last week. Investors may be buying into CEO Chuck Robbins' vision, but are willing to punish the firm if it doesn't deliver on their engorged expectations.

Q3 was ‘solid' but not spectacular

Anyone on the Q3 conference call was left in no doubt that Cisco had a ‘solid' quarter.

In fact, Robbins and his CFO Kelly Kramer deployed the word ‘solid' no less than seven times during their overview of the results which showed revenue rising from $11.9bn to $12.5bn year on year and net income swelling seven per cent to $2.7bn.

Breaking that down further, infrastructure platforms grew two per cent and security grew 11 per cent.

By geography, EMEA sales rose six per cent, compared with the four and three per cent growth recorded in the Americas and APJC, respectively.

Recent acquisitions added about 1.2 per cent to the revenue total, but in actual fact despite the recent growth Q3 sales remain below 2016 levels (see graph below).

"To summarise, Q3 was a good quarter with solid top-line growth, strong profitability and order growth. We continue to make solid progress on our strategic priorities, making key investments to drive our long-term growth," burbled Kramer.

Switching has stabilised

Having appeared to be in freefall a year or so ago, Cisco's core switching business is going great guns again, with sales returning to growth in Q3. Cisco said it saw switching growth in both the datacentre and campus, thanks in the latter instance to the introduction of its new Catalyst 9000 switch.

Indeed, Robbins waxed lyrical about Cisco's return to form in switching - and its broader enterprise portfolio - on the conference call when asked what excited him most about potential opportunities for the vendor.

"When I became CEO three years ago and even when we were on the road last year, I said the number one priority for us right now - and obviously we're going to continue the business model evolution - but the number one priority was to get the enterprise portfolio and particularly the switching business stabilised, which our teams have done a great job," he said on a conference call, a transcript of which can be viewed here.

"And I'm very optimistic about the overall innovation within the intent-based networking portfolio that we're going to bring forward over the next months, quarters and years."

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