Cisco Pressured By Enterprise Trends Ahead Of Fiscal Q3 Earnings

By | May 16, 2016

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Negative trends in the enterprise market — large companies and government agencies — are lowering expectations ahead of Cisco Systems ‘ ( CSCO ) fiscal Q3 earnings, due out Wednesday after the market close. Many large companies are outsourcing business computing workloads to cloud computing service providers such as Amazon Web Services, part of Amazon.com ( AMZN ), lessening their need for the routers, switches and other networking gear sold by Cisco and others. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters estimate Cisco earnings minus items will rise 2% to 55 cents, though they see revenue falling 1% to $11.97 billion. “We see three major issues into this earnings release, including weak IT data points, all signaling industrywide IT spending weakness, less visibility around service provider spending, and global macro exposure,” Kulbinder Garcha, a Credit Suisse analyst, said in a research report. “Year to date, we have seen weak IT spending indications from large bellwethers including IBM ( IBM ), EMC ( EMC ), Juniper ( JNPR ), Brocade ( BRCD ) and SAP ( SAP ),” added Garcha, who has an underperform rating on the stock. JPMorgan analyst Rod Hall, in a research report, cited negative enterprise market commentary from Intel ( INTC ), Oracle ( ORCL ) and Hewlett Packard Enterprise ( HPE ). Reports of slower tech spending was a factor in the stock market’s plunge early in the year. With many tech companies struggling to meet expectations recently, an in-line quarter for Cisco might be good enough to move shares higher, said Citigroup analyst Jim Suva. RW Baird’s Jayson Noland was another analyst citing slower spending of late. “Our partner survey results indicate a softer-than-expected April quarter, with improved prospects for growth for the remainder of calendar 2016,” Noland wrote in a research note. Cisco stock, up 1% near 27 in early trading in the stock market today , is about even in 2016. Cisco stock is up 20% since touching a two-year low in early February. Scalper1 News

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