A $10,000 Investment in Cisco When Chuck Robbins Became CEO Is Worth This Much Today

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By Trey Thoelcke Published

Quick Read

  • Cisco (CSCO) turned a $10,000 stake from Robbins's 2015 start into $54,132 by 2026, a 441% return built on his software and AI pivot.

  • Cisco beat the S&P 500 (SPY) by nearly 180 percentage points over the Robbins era while also doubling its quarterly dividend to $0.42.

  • Robbins raised Cisco's FY26 AI infrastructure order target to $9 billion from $5 billion, with Wall Street's consensus implying 17% further upside.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Cisco Systems didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

A $10,000 Investment in Cisco When Chuck Robbins Became CEO Is Worth This Much Today

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The Operator Era at Cisco

When Chuck Robbins took the CEO seat at Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO | CSCO Price Prediction) on July 26, 2015, the company was a slow-growth hardware vendor sliding into the shadow of cloud upstarts. Robbins spent the next decade reworking Cisco around software, security, and recurring revenue, capped by the roughly $28 billion Splunk acquisition that closed in 2024, the largest deal in company history.

The pivot to AI-era networking now dominates the company’s narrative. Robbins told investors, “Cisco delivered record quarterly revenue in Q3 and we saw very strong, broad-based demand for our products, demonstrating the relevance of our technology for connecting and securing AI.” Management raised the FY26 AI infrastructure order target to $9 billion from $5 billion, with AI orders hitting $5.3 billion year to date. Q3 FY26 delivered $1.06 in non-GAAP EPS on $15.84 billion in revenue, up 12% year over year.

CSCO earnings quotes

$10,000 Grew Into $54,132

A $10,000 stake made on Robbins’s first day and held through July 16, 2026, returned 441.32% on price alone, excluding dividends, which grew from $0.21 to $0.42 per quarter. The same money in the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA: SPY) returned 263.12%.

Cisco S&P 500
1-Year Return $16,612 (66.12%) $12,027 (20.27%)
5-Year Return $23,494 (134.94%) $17,404 (74.04%)
10-Year Return $49,330 (393.3%) $34,690 (246.9%)
Robbins Era $54,132 (441.32%) $36,312 (263.12%)

Most of the outperformance materialized late in the period. Cisco was mocked as dead money for years before AI networking demand pulled shares from a $65.75 52-week low to a $130.37 high. The stock is up 42.4% year to date. Anyone who held through the flat 2022–2023 stretch was rewarded; anyone who chased the recent peak is already down 8.3% in a month.

Grading Robbins: A-Minus

Robbins inherited a lumbering hardware vendor and delivered a top-quartile decade against the benchmark while doubling the dividend. However, the Splunk integration and AI order ramp remain unproven, which costs him half a letter grade.

The Bull and Bear Case From Here

The bull case rests on hyperscaler AI networking spend continuing to expand and the $9 billion FY26 order target landing. Wall Street’s $129.09 consensus price target implies 17.7% further upside. The bear case is that whitebox switches, Arista, and Nvidia’s networking stack eat share while gross margins compress from the AI hardware mix. At a 25x forward P/E with a 1.5% yield, the setup skews cautiously bullish, though a pullback closer to the $86.84 200-day moving average would offer a wider margin of safety.

CSCO price target
CSCO analyst ratings

 

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

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About the Author Trey Thoelcke →

Trey has been an editor and author at 24/7 Wall St. for more than a decade, where he has published thousands of articles analyzing corporate earnings, dividend stocks, short interest, insider buying, private equity, and market trends. His comprehensive coverage spans the full spectrum of financial markets, from blue-chip stalwarts to emerging growth companies.

Beyond 24/7 Wall St., Trey has created and edited financial content for Benzinga and AOL's BloggingStocks, contributing additional hundreds of articles to the investment community. He previously oversaw the 24/7 Climate Insights site, managing editorial operations and content strategy, and currently oversees and creates content for My Investing News.

Trey's editorial expertise extends across multiple publishing environments. He served as production editor at Dearborn Financial Publishing and development editor at Kaplan, where he helped shape financial education materials. Earlier in his career, he worked as a writer-producer at SVE. His freelance editing portfolio includes work for prestigious clients such as Sage Publications, Rand McNally, the Institute for Supply Management, the American Library Association, Eggplant Literary Productions, and Spiegel.

Outside of financial journalism, Trey writes fiction and has been an active member of the writing community for years, overseeing a long-running critique group and moderating workshop sessions at regional conventions. He lives with his family in an old house in the Midwest.

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