Cisco earns down 19 percent but CEO says orders improving, “tipping point” passed this summer

By AP
Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Cisco earns down but says ‘tipping point’ passed

SAN FRANCISCO — Cisco Systems Inc. CEO John Chambers said Wednesday that the company’s latest quarterly numbers reinforce his observation that recession-dampened orders are improving after passing a “tipping point” this summer.

Net income for the world’s No. 1 maker of computer-networking gear dropped 19 percent and sales fell 13 percent, but still topped Wall Street’s forecasts.

The stock climbed 82 cents, or 3.5 percent, to $24.11 in extended trading Wednesday after the results were reported. In regular trading earlier, it gained 31 cents, or 1.4 percent, to close at $23.22.

Cisco said net income was down 19 percent from the year-ago period to $1.8 billion, or 30 cents per share.

Excluding one-time charges, Cisco earned 36 cents per share, ahead of analysts’ expectation for 31 cents per share in net income, on that same basis.

Revenue dropped 13 percent to $9 billion. Analysts expected $8.7 billion for the fiscal first quarter that ended Oct. 24, according to a poll by Thomson Reuters.

“Building off what we saw as a clear tipping point in Q4, our Q1 results continued to reflect strong sequential growth trends that meet or exceed expectations during normal economic times,” Chambers said in a statement.

Cisco’s fiscal fourth quarter ended July 25.

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

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