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Technology Stocks : Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bob Kim who wrote (48344)2/7/2001 9:16:03 AM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 77400
 
internetstockreport.com
Investors Must Believe Their Own Eyes
By Chris Nerney
Senior Analyst

It's almost become a mantra for Internet companies trying to put a spin on
bad news: Yes, it was a weak quarter, and the next one or two also should
be soft. After that, well, we just don't have any "visibility."

Of course, when shares were soaring and the economy was cranking, 20/20
clarity practically was a commodity. Internet executives could peer one,
two, even five years down the road and blithely predict even more robust
revenue growth and continued (or eventual) profitability.

Cisco Systems tried a slightly different approach in releasing its
disappointing second-quarter earnings after the market closed Tuesday.
While explaining the numerous factors behind the networking equipment
giant's failure to even meet street estimates for the first time in more
than three years, CEO John Chambers assured analysts and investors that
the downturn now darkening the economic landscape should extend no more
than a quarter or two. After that, assuming some help in the form of more
interest-rate reductions and federal tax cuts, the sun should shine again.

I'd have more faith in Chambers' current prognostication skills if I
didn't remember that as recently as November, Cisco had increased its
sales forecasts for Q2 and the 2001 fiscal year. Back then, the company
said it expected sequential quarterly revenue growth to reach single or
low double digits for Q2, with fiscal year revenue growth forecast between
50% and 60%. In December, Chambers held firm to those predictions.

On Tuesday, however, Cisco said it expects up to a 5% decline in growth
for the third quarter, no growth in Q4, and fiscal revenue growth to hit
only 40%.

Cisco remains the most powerful (if increasingly challenged)
Internet-related company in the world, and despite missing forecasts, it
still posted earnings of $1.3 billion, or 18 cents per share, on revenues
of $6.75 billion.

Still, it's now clear that even Cisco is not immune to economic forces
buffeting the Internet and high-tech sectors - and to be fair, Chambers
hinted as much last month when he said Q2 would be "challenging" for the
company.

The lesson for investors is that they must rely not on the cheery or fuzzy
prognostications of Internet CEOs, but on the cold, hard numbers that tell
us where the economy is headed. Everything else is just spin.