‘We did not have a plan for a country to shut down’ — Cisco stock plunges 13% as China lockdown affects supply and outlook
Cisco Systems Inc. shares plunged in the extended session Wednesday after the tech bellwether’s revenue forecast came up more than $1 billion short of Wall Street expectations, which executives blamed on COVID shutdowns in China.
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Cisco forecast fiscal fourth-quarter earnings of 76 cents to 84 cents a share on a 5.5% to 1% year-over-year decline in revenue, or a range between $12.1 billion and $12.67 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated 92 cents a share on revenue of $13.87 billion.
That guidance forced Cisco to chop its annual forecast with just a couple of months to go in its fiscal year. After consistently predicting revenue would increase 4.5% or better in this fiscal year, Cisco executives reduced their view to sales growth of 2% to 3% for the year, while also reducing their annual forecast for adjusted profit.
In a conference call Wednesday afternoon, executives said supply issues were exacerbated by COVID lockdowns in China.
“We did not have a plan for a country to shut down,” Chuck Robbins, Cisco’s chief executive and chairman, said on the call.
Both Chief Financial Officer Scott Herren and Robbins said that the forecast disappointment is “100% supply.” Robbins told analysts the company is sitting on a record backlog and record inventory.
Robbins explained that since the company’s fiscal quarter ended in April, it is experiencing a whole quarter of lockdowns in China as opposed to companies with quarters that ended in March. When China locked down Shanghai starting on March 27, it threw a monkey wrench into Cisco’s ability to get components.
“We’re talking really about the Shanghai situation, so we had $200 million from Russia, and then we had $300 million that was completely attributed to our inability to get power supplies out of China,” Robbins said. “That’s the simplicity of what caused the problem.”
“In Shanghai, there are lots of components that go into our power supply, so we’re not able to get those components,” Robbins explained. “Shanghai now is saying they are going to open up June 1.”
“We don’t know exactly what that means, and what that means to when that implies we would start getting any supply out,” Robbins said. “And correspondingly, we believe when they open up and when they do allow transportation logistics to start up, we believe there’s going to be a high degree of congestion.”
While Robbins used power-supply components as an example, CFO Herren added that supply problems extended to many more components.
“It’s not just power supplies,” Herren said. “We’ve got issues in a number of different areas. I tried to give you a sense of scale because I know it’s 41,000 unique components, what we said is about 350 have potential supply concerns right now.”
Cisco reported third-quarter net income of $3.04 billion, or 73 cents a share, compared with $2.86 billion, or 68 cents a share , in the year-ago period. Adjusted earnings, which exclude stock-based compensation expenses and other items, were 87 cents a share, compared with 83 cents a share in the year-ago period. Revenue was virtually flat at $12.83 billion compared with $12.8 billion in the year-ago quarter.
Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast 86 cents a share in adjusted earnings on revenue of $13.37 billion, based on Cisco’s forecast of 85 cents to 87 cents a share on revenue of $13.19 billion to $13.44 billion.
The company reported that “secure, agile networks” sales rose 4% to $5.87 billion; hybrid work, or collaboration, sales declined 7% to $1.13 billion; “Internet-for-the-Future” sales rose 6% to $1.32 billion; and end-to-end security sales rose 7% to $938 million from the year-ago period. Analysts had forecast “secure, agile networks” sales of $6.1 billion, “hybrid work” sales of $1.13 billion, IftF sales of $1.44 billion, and end-to-end security sales of $930.8 million.
Total product sales rose 3% to $9.45 billion, compared with the Street’s estimate of $9.81 billion, and services revenue declined 8% to $3.39 billion, while analysts expected $3.54 billion.
Supply problems caused by the China lockdown also affected software sales at Cisco, according to the CEO. On Wednesday, Robbins said the company had a software backlog of “well over $2 billion” that was “connected to a piece of hardware that we will not begin recognizing the revenue until the hardware ships.”
Last week, focus fell on Cisco’s security business following reports that Shelly Blackburn, Cisco’s vice president of security sales and a 22-year company veteran, was leaving the company. Cisco has not confirmed such a move. As of Wednesday, Blackburn’s Twitter and LinkedIn pages still list her at Cisco.
Last quarter, Robbins admitted the company needs to improve its security business, and overall the company told MarketWatch that while supply-chain issues had not gotten any better they had also not gotten any worse. Supply-chain issues have dogged Cisco for more than a year as they have most manufacturers who rely upon semiconductors amid a global chip shortage.
“I will say that we have room to get better on security and the teams are working hard on that,” Robbins told analysts three months ago, when asked why Cisco’s security business wasn’t growing as fast as Palo Alto Networks Inc. PANW,
In the past 12 months, Cisco shares fell 9% as of Wednesday’s close, compared with a 7% decline by the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA,