Analyst(s): FuturumAI
Publication Date: August 12, 2025
Cisco is entering this quarter’s earnings cycle with a narrative shift that is hard to ignore: the transition from being a primarily hardware-driven networking vendor to a platform provider at the center of the AI infrastructure boom.
What You Need to Know:
- Cisco reported $12.7B revenue (down 13% YoY) and $0.88 EPS (down 12% YoY) last quarter, beating EPS expectations despite revenue softness.
- Guidance for this quarter: $0.96–$0.98 EPS on $14.5–$14.7B revenue; Street consensus is $0.98 EPS on $14.6B revenue.
- AI data center networking (Silicon One, 800G) is gaining traction with hyperscalers.
- Splunk integration is expanding Cisco’s presence in security and observability.
- Futurum Equities expects Cisco to beat consensus, driven by AI order momentum and backlog strength.
Recommendations:
To capitalize on Cisco’s positioning in AI networking and observability, enterprise buyers and investors should:
- Leverage AI-ready infrastructure by pairing Silicon One-powered networking with Splunk observability to accelerate AI workload deployment.
- Monitor backlog signals and use order book trends and RPO data to gauge multi-year demand strength.
- Align with the 800G roadmap to ensure infrastructure readiness for NVIDIA Blackwell and other next-gen GPU clusters.
Is Cisco’s AI Push About to Spark an Earnings Beat?
Analyst Take: Cisco is entering this quarter’s earnings cycle with a narrative shift that is hard to ignore: the transition from being a primarily hardware-driven networking vendor to a platform provider at the center of the AI infrastructure boom. The company’s Silicon One-based 800G switches and its deepening relationships with hyperscalers put it in a strong position to benefit from the growth in AI data centers. Hyperscaler AI training clusters require extremely high-throughput, low-latency network fabrics, and Cisco’s offerings in this space can compete with — and in some cases outperform — incumbent solutions.
Equally important is the Splunk acquisition, which gives Cisco an expanded role in security, observability, and incident response for AI workloads. The integration of Splunk means Cisco can now bundle networking, security, and observability into a single stack, an attractive proposition for enterprise IT leaders managing complex AI deployments.
Last quarter’s results were mixed: revenue declined due to order digestion in enterprise campus networking, but EPS beat expectations thanks to cost control and mix improvements. The AI narrative may take the front seat this quarter if management shows that hyperscaler orders translate into backlog growth.
Bullish drivers:
- Clear backlog and RPO growth tied to AI deployments could unlock multiple expansions.
- Splunk’s cross-sell into the existing Cisco base has the potential to accelerate software revenue and improve margins.
Risks:
- Enterprise networking softness could continue to weigh on overall growth if AI-related orders don’t ramp fast enough.
- Macro uncertainty and elongated sales cycles in certain regions could temper the near-term outlook.
From a market perspective, Cisco’s opportunity lies in balancing short-term digestion in traditional networking with the secular growth in AI infrastructure. If management delivers a strong guide with AI contributing meaningfully to order growth, it could shift sentiment decisively bullish. For enterprise executives, now is the time to evaluate Cisco’s AI-ready networking stack, especially in the context of multi-year GPU cluster buildouts.
For more information, visit the company’s newsroom. Cisco will release its Q4FY25 Earnings results on August 13, 2025.
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Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.
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Future-proofing networks with Cisco Silicon One – Six Five On The Road
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