Is Cisco Systems, Inc. a Buy?

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The stock price of Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ: CSCO) has recently enjoyed a bit of a renaissance. The company, which develops and sells networking hardware, has seen its shares increase almost 100% over the past five years compared to the S&P 500 index's 67% return. This, even though the business has not shown any fundamental improvements in its numbers over the same period. Don't believe me? Consider: In its 2013 fiscal year, Cisco reported $48.6 billion in revenue and $10 billion of net income. In its 2017 fiscal year, the company reported...wait for it...$48 billion in revenue and $9.6 billion in net income. That's right, over four whole years, the company's revenue and net income actually inched down, not up!

So, if the company isn't recording more sales and earning more income, why are analysts upgrading the stock even after huge moves to the upside? When one looks under the hood, beyond the headline numbers, there are reasons to believe the company is past the better part of a major transition, one that could see it return to growth for years to come. Let's take a look at what some of these catalysts are and whether they make Cisco's stock a buy for investors today.

Rows of switches and routers basked in blue light.
Rows of switches and routers basked in blue light.

For years, Cisco's top and bottom line growth has inched downward. Are things finally beginning to change? Image source: Getty Images.

A return to innovation

Can an old dog learn new tricks? Cisco's meat and potatoes has always been designing and selling network hardware like switches and routers. While the company has made extremely successful forays into other markets, like cybersecurity, the vast majority of its sales still come from selling hardware.

When the company reported its 2018 second-quarter results, its infrastructure platforms accounted for $6.7 billion, a 2% increase year over year. This accounted for 56% of its total revenue for the quarter and helped Cisco grow its revenue by 3% year over year, its first revenue increase in two years. In fact, a lot of its numbers showed positive movement in the second quarter.

Cisco Systems Metrics

2018 Q2

2017 Q2

Change

Revenue

$11.9 billion

$11.6 billion

2.7%

Recurring revenue

$3.93 billion

$3.6 billion

9.3%

Non-GAAP EPS

$0.63

$0.57

10.5%

Data source: Cisco Systems, Inc.

What drove this increase in sales? The company seems to have finally figured out that it needs to continue innovating its router and switching products, or else smaller competitors, such as Arista Networks Inc (NYSE: ANET), will eat its lunch and steal market share. On this front, Cisco looks like it is delivering. In the company's second-quarter conference call, CEO Chuck Robbins talked about the successful launch of the company's new switching platform, the Catalyst 9000: