Cisco gives weak revenue forecast showing recession biting | Tech News

Cisco gives weak revenue forecast showing recession biting

Cisco Systems Inc. gave a lackluster sales forecast for the current period, a sign that businesses are spending less in the pandemic-driven recession.

By:BLOOMBERG
| Updated on: Aug 20 2022, 22:33 IST
Cisco reported Webex video conferencing app registered a record 324 million attendees in March
Cisco reported Webex video conferencing app registered a record 324 million attendees in March (AP)
Cisco reported Webex video conferencing app registered a record 324 million attendees in March
Cisco reported Webex video conferencing app registered a record 324 million attendees in March (AP)

Chief Executive Officer Chuck Robbins pledged to reduce expenses by $1 billion through a reorganisation that will include job cuts and early retirement for some workers.

The plan will cost about $900 million, which will include severance and other “termination benefits,” the company said in a regulatory filing. Chief Financial Officer Kelly Kramer is also leaving.

Revenue will fall 9% to 11% from a year earlier in the fiscal first quarter, which ends in late October, the San Jose, California-based company said Wednesday in a statement. 

Analysts on average had projected a decline of about 7%. Adjusted profit will be 69 cents to 71 cents a share, lower than Wall Street expectations of 76 cents, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Cisco shares fell 6.5% in extended trading. The stock closed at $48.10 in New York earlier.

A large chunk of Cisco's revenue comes from government agencies, small and medium-sized businesses and providers of internet and online video services. While some larger companies are still spending, many smaller customers have cut spending to adjust to an economic slowdown sparked by Covid-19 lockdowns.

In Cisco's Americas region, where sales dropped 12%, demand hasn't improved in the last 90 days and the U.S. needs Congress to provide another stimulus package, Robbins said in an interview.

“As you move down the customer stack, things just get weaker and weaker as the customers get smaller and smaller because they just don't have the financial wherewithal,” he said. “This country is still driven by small and medium-sized business for hiring and everything else. I'm concerned about what happens next.”

Robbins said that optimism about a rebound in tech company earnings has been stoked by consumer demand in certain areas. But major investments in corporate infrastructure will require more evidence of an improving economy, he cautioned.

ALSO READ: Cisco Webex sees 3x growth in April

Robbins is trying to reduce Cisco's reliance on expensive proprietary hardware and increase sales of software and services. After returning to growth in 2018, revenue has started to decline again this year, showing how Cisco's business is still exposed to economic cycles.

Cisco said net income in the fiscal fourth-quarter rose to $2.6 billion, or 62 cents a share, from $2.2 billion, or 51 cents, a year earlier. Revenue fell to $12.2 billion. Excluding certain items, Cisco posted profit of 80 cents a share. Analysts were looking for profit of 74 cents on revenue of $12.1 billion.

Infrastructure platforms, its hardware business and main source of revenue, suffered a 16% sales drop to $6.6 billion. Applications, the software business, saw revenue fall 9%, while security-related sales increased 10%.

By Ian King

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First Published Date: 13 Aug, 15:16 IST
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