Tech Check
- 3D's Tipping Point and Your Living Room
- Silicon Valley and Hollywood Now Fast Friends
- HP Comes in As Expected; Is It Time to Buy?
- Apple Comes to AT&T's Rescue
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- Dell Has Some Explaining to Do
- Dell May Start to Show Some Promise
- Has Twitter's Finest Hours (Seconds) Come and Gone?
- Intel's Andy Bryant Offers An Explanation
MOST SHARED
- US Shoppers Spent Less Over Black Friday: NRF
- Tiger Woods Wants to Protect Family Privacy: Agent
- UAE Stocks Tumble on Dubai Woes; Asia Rebounds
- Dubai's Nakheel Seeks Suspension $5.25 Billion in Bonds
- South Korea Sees Exports Bouncing, but Risks Remain
- Japan Won't Intervene to Weaken Yen: Finance Minister
- Dubai is Harsh Reminder of Prolonged Global Recovery
- Banks With The Biggest Exposure to The UAE
- Tiger Woods Wants to Protect Family Privacy: Agent
- Portfolio Prep for Next Week: 'Don't Get Crazy'
- U.S. Stocks Fall on Dubai Worries
- Black Friday at Best Buy
- Strategists on Dubai: Avoid 'Rash Moves' Now
- Longer Lines, Fuller Carts This Black Friday
- Dubai Stock Market Fear Has 'Legs': Dennis Gartman
- Obama's Emission Reduction Pledge Paints Future for Autos
- Is Super Bowl Halftime Act Too Old?
- Regulators Compile Global List of 'Systemic Risk' Banks
- UAE Central Bank Stands by Banks Amid Dubai Crisis
- Dubai's Nakheel Seeks Suspension $5.25 Billion in Bonds
- US Shoppers Spent Less Over Black Friday: NRF
- US Senator Opposes Fed Chief Bernanke Renomination
- A Weak IPO Debut for Las Vegas Sands' Macau Unit
- US Treasury Wants Banks to Do More to Ease Mortgages
- Woods Has Nothing More to Say to Police: Agent
- Danish Draft Urges 50% Global Emissions Cut by 2050
RSS FEED
CNBC Silicon Valley Bureau Chief
Here's the news tech investors were craving: big time beats from Cisco Systems on the top and bottom lines, gross margins, and some very optimistic commentary from CEO John Chambers.
![]() |
AP |
The company is also getting it done operationally, reporting a surprisingly robust 66.3 percent gross margin. Wall Street anticipated 64 percent, which would have been a sequential decline from the 65.3 percent reported a quarter earlier. So an increase in this metric is a big, and positive surprise.
Cisco's board also authorized an additional $10 billion in stock buybacks.
From John Chambers in the company's earnings release: "Building off what we saw as a clear tipping point in Q4, our Q1 results continued to reflect strong sequential growth rends that meet or exceed expectations during normal economic times." He goes on to reference an "improving economic outlook," and then cites an "unparalleled opportunity to drive more value into the core of the network." In other words, better times lay ahead.
Cisco did report $35.3 billion in cash, which is only a fractional increase to what the company reported at the end of last quarter, so there may be a question or two about why the company wasn't able to bank more. I asked the company whether any of the cash connected to its $3 billion offers for Starent Networks and Tandberg had already been eliminated from the balance sheet and I was told that that won't happen until those deals close. So that $35.3 billion figure is solid, and doesn't include offers on the table.
Meantime, with consensus revenue estimates for Cisco in its second fiscal quarter at or near $8.96 billion, and the company's first quarter historically its slowest, it stands to reason that Cisco will beat Wall Street expectations and offer better than expected guidance. We'll see.
This is a big report at a time when Wall Street certainly needs it, especially with the Nasdaq giving back all its rally today at the close. Should be interesting to see how optimistic Chambers is when he talks to analysts tonight.
Questions? Comments?









