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.
$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.
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