Why Cisco Is More Than a Hardware Slowdown Label
Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) is still often framed as a mature networking hardware company whose fortunes rise and fall with enterprise box shipments. That view has become too narrow. Cisco still sells hardware, but the current earnings story is increasingly shaped by software and subscription economics, security and observability, large networking refresh cycles, and its position inside AI infrastructure buildouts.
The latest quarter underscored that shift. Cisco delivered record Q3 FY2026 revenue of $15.8 billion, and management described demand as broad-based rather than concentrated in a single product family. Total product orders rose 35% year over year, or 19% excluding hyperscalers, while networking product orders grew more than 50%. That is not the pattern of a company simply waiting for a legacy hardware cycle to recover. It is the pattern of a vendor whose installed base, security stack, and networking relevance are supporting a larger platform story.
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The investor question now is less about whether Cisco can still ship switches and routers, and more about whether it can keep turning AI-era infrastructure demand and recurring software relationships into durable earnings growth. On the evidence from Q3, that broader thesis is holding up.
What the Latest Results Say About Networking Demand, Software Mix, and Security
Cisco reported Q3 FY2026 revenue of $15.8 billion, up 12% year over year. GAAP net income was $3.4 billion, or $0.85 per share, while non-GAAP net income was $4.2 billion, or $1.06 per share. Non-GAAP operating margin was 34.2%, and non-GAAP gross margin was 66.0%. Those are strong figures on their own, but the more important message was where the demand came from.
Product revenue rose 17% while services revenue slipped 1%. Within that mix, networking revenue grew 25%, observability grew 3%, collaboration fell 1%, and security was flat. Flat security is not a breakout result, but it still supports the point that Cisco is selling a wider stack than a pure networking vendor. More importantly, the company’s remaining performance obligations reached $43.5 billion, up 4%, while deferred revenue totaled $28.6 billion, up 2%. Those backlog-style metrics help show that Cisco’s economics are supported by recurring and committed revenue streams, not only by quarter-to-quarter product shipments.
Management also pushed the AI infrastructure angle harder. Cisco said it had taken $5.3 billion of AI infrastructure orders year to date, raised expected FY2026 AI orders to $9 billion from $5 billion, and raised expected FY2026 AI revenue to $4 billion from $3 billion. Even if investors apply a discount to management’s enthusiasm, those figures still show that Cisco is participating in AI buildouts as more than a peripheral supplier.
Why Recurring Revenue, Cash Generation, and Capital Returns Matter
One reason the market should look beyond the hardware label is that Cisco still converts demand into substantial cash. Q3 FY2026 cash flow from operations was $3.8 billion. The balance sheet ended the quarter with $16.6 billion of cash, cash equivalents, and investments. In the same quarter, Cisco returned $2.9 billion to shareholders through dividends and buybacks, including $1.7 billion of dividends and $1.3 billion of repurchases.
That capital-return profile matters because it shows Cisco does not need a speculative turnaround narrative to support the stock. The company is funding shareholder returns while continuing to invest behind platform breadth. A hardware-only story would normally look more cyclical and more margin-sensitive than what Cisco actually reported. Instead, Cisco is showing the kind of financial resilience investors usually associate with companies that have meaningful software, service, and installed-base advantages.
The campus and data-center refresh cycles also matter here. Management said campus networking orders grew more than 25% year over year and data-center switching orders grew more than 40%. Those numbers suggest Cisco is benefiting not only from AI enthusiasm but also from a broader enterprise infrastructure upgrade cycle. That makes the story bigger than any single product family.
What Investors Should Watch Next: Orders, AI Networking, and Enterprise Spending
The first watch item is whether order momentum stays broad. Total product orders were up 35% in Q3 FY2026, but investors should watch whether that remains diversified across enterprise, service provider, and hyperscaler demand rather than concentrating in one bucket.
The second watch item is AI conversion. Management’s higher targets for AI orders and revenue are encouraging, but investors will want to see those expectations translate into reported revenue without a corresponding erosion in margins. Cisco’s relevance to AI is a real opportunity, but the market will keep testing how durable and profitable that opportunity is.
The third watch item is the balance between product and recurring revenue. Cisco’s deferred revenue and RPO balances help support the platform thesis, but investors should keep tracking whether software, services, security, and observability are doing enough to smooth the inherent cyclicality of product demand.
Cisco’s valuation case improves if investors stop treating it as a slow, hardware-only incumbent and instead see a company with networking depth, software and security attachments, and an increasingly credible role in AI infrastructure.
Key Signals for Investors
Record Q3 FY2026 revenue of $15.8 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $1.06 show Cisco is executing well even before the full AI opportunity is realized.
Product orders up 35% year over year, or 19% excluding hyperscalers, suggest the current demand strength is broader than one customer cohort.
The increase in expected FY2026 AI orders to $9 billion and expected AI revenue to $4 billion makes Cisco’s AI exposure more material than many investors likely assumed a year ago.
Remaining performance obligations of $43.5 billion and deferred revenue of $28.6 billion reinforce that Cisco has meaningful recurring and committed revenue support.
The next test is whether AI networking demand and enterprise refresh activity can keep offsetting any softness in slower-growth parts of the portfolio.
Sources
https://newsroom.cisco.com/c/r/newsroom/en/us/a/y2026/m05/cisco-reports-third-quarter-earnings.html.
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/858877/000085887726000078/csco-20260425.htm.
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/858877/000085887725000111/csco-20250726.htm.











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