Cisco’s results reveal its struggles in the emerging markets

Business overview: A must-know investor's guide to Cisco (Part 3 of 8)

(Continued from Part 2)

The performance so far

Despite revenue and EPS meeting street expectations, Cisco’s fiscal second quarter revenue fell 8% to $11.2 billion while net income declined 55% to $1.4 billion or $0.27 per share. Gross profit margins were 53%, down from 61% a year ago. The net income included a pretax charge of $655 million related to the expected remediation cost of issues with memory components in certain products sold in prior fiscal years. In the prior fiscal first quarter 2014, revenue rose slightly by 1.8% to $12.1 billion, while net income was $2.0 billion, or $0.37 per share. Shares plunged in November after Cisco issued a bleak outlook for the second quarter 2014 on the back of emerging market weakness and cautious enterprise technology spending in its developed markets. Cisco’s fiscal first quarter 2014 earnings were impacted by emerging market “challenges” and the U.S. government shutdown.

Analysts believe growth at the company has been declining with the company predicting a fall in revenue in the fiscal third quarter as well and CEO Chambers reiterating “its plan to return to growth over the next several quarters.”

Cisco’s emerging market woes continued from the previous quarter with orders falling 3% year-over-year. In the fiscal first quarter 2014, the networking giant saw a sharp decline in orders in China, Brazil, Mexico, India, and Russia. Cisco’s revenue in China declined 18% in the the fiscal first quarter 2014. On being asked by an analyst whether the decline was an impact of the NSA snooping scandal, Cisco’s management said on the earnings call that “China continued to decline as we and our peers worked through the challenging political dynamic in that country,” plus, the scandal is “not having a material impact but it’s certainly causing people to stop and then rethink decisions.”

Cisco is losing market shares in China to China-based Huawei Technologies, the world’s second largest network equipment supplier, and ZTE. News reports noted that Cisco might also be seeing retaliation of a U.S. ban on the sale of Chinese-made equipment to wireless carriers over security concerns. Although IBM (IBM), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and Microsoft (MSFT) saw a fall in sales in China in the wake of the NSA scandal, Juniper (JNPR) said it saw no impact.

Service provider orders also declined 12% year-over-year in the second quarter after a 13% decline in the fiscal first quarter of 2014. Cisco’s service provider customers include regional, national, and international wireline carriers, as well as Internet, cable, and wireless providers.