Technology

How Analysts Rate Juniper After the Warning

Thinkstock

Juniper Networks Inc. (NYSE: JNPR) saw its shares sink early in the week following the announcement of its preliminary financial results. These obviously were not up to par with what analysts expected, and the analysts took this opportunity to weigh in on this tech company.

Juniper now expects revenue for the first quarter to be in the range of $1.09 billion to $1.10 billion, below the company’s previous guidance of $1.15 billion to $1.19 billion, due primarily to weaker than anticipated demand from Enterprise and the timing of deployments of certain U.S. and EMEA Tier 1 telecoms. The company expects earnings per share (EPS) in the range of $0.35 to $0.37, compared to the previous guidance of $0.42 to $0.46.

Consensus estimates calls for EPS of $0.45 and $1.19 billion in revenue.

As a result, Merrill Lynch maintained a Buy rating with $31 price objective. The firm noted management’s original guidance for the quarter was 2% to 6% below street estimates on a weak macro-outlook. Merrill Lynch adjusted its estimates in line with the pre-announcement and maintain its Buy rating on an expected pickup in SP spend in the second half, cloud growth, new products, margin expansion and stock buybacks.

In its report, Merrill Lynch detailed:

We believe the company’s three core product lines should see solid growth in 2016. Catalysts for growth include new products that have a strong performance advantages, which could drive market share gains. Juniper’s security business has also stabilized and should return to growth in 2016 following years of declines.

Wells Fargo believes that the risk/reward remains attractive. With shares of Juniper trading at 11 times the firm’s new 2016 EPS estimate of $2.07, Wells Fargo thinks valuation is likely to limit downside from current levels and view evidence that fundamentals may improve beyond the calendar first quarter as a potential catalyst that could drive the stock toward the firm’s valuation range of $29 to $31.


Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.