Company Overview

Cisco has spent the better part of a decade being written off as legacy tech — a slow-growth networking dinosaur living off its dominant installed base while the world moved to the cloud. Last week, that story ended. On May 13th, Cisco reported fiscal Q3 2026 results that weren’t just a beat — they were a fundamental rerating of what kind of company Cisco has become. Revenue hit a record $15.84 billion, up 12% year-over-year, and the stock surged more than 13% in a single session to an intraday all-time high.

The real headline wasn’t the revenue — it was the AI orders. Cisco disclosed that it had already booked $5.3 billion in AI infrastructure orders from hyperscalers through the first three quarters of the year, and raised its full-year FY26 target from $5 billion to $9 billion. That means management believes it will book roughly $3.7 billion more in AI-related orders in the current quarter alone. Then yesterday, at JPMorgan’s tech conference, CEO Chuck Robbins escalated the narrative further — describing AI as “bigger than the dot-com era” and crediting Cisco’s proprietary Silicon One chip as the reason the $9 billion figure is even possible. The market is still digesting what this means for a company trading well below its dot-com-era premium.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

Record Q3 Revenue → 12% Growth, Beat Above High End of Guidance Cisco reported record quarterly revenue of $15.84 billion, up 12% year-over-year, with non-GAAP EPS of $1.06 beating consensus of $1.03 and coming in above the high end of management’s own guidance range. Product orders surged 35% year-over-year overall, with networking product orders up more than 50%.

AI Orders Nearly Doubled → $9 Billion FY26 Target The most consequential number in the print: Cisco raised its full-year AI infrastructure order forecast from $5 billion to $9 billion after booking $5.3 billion year-to-date. FY26 AI revenue recognition was lifted to $4 billion from $3 billion. FY27 AI hyperscale revenue is already being guided to at least $6 billion — giving the story multi-year legs.

JPMorgan Conference Catalyst → CEO Doubles Down, Today Yesterday at JPMorgan’s annual tech conference, CEO Chuck Robbins made the bull case more explicitly than any earnings call: “If we didn’t have our own silicon, the $9 billion that we announced would probably be close to zero.” He called AI bigger than the dot-com era and pointed to the Silicon One design win cycle as still widening — a fresh same-week catalyst on top of last week’s earnings surge.

Guidance Raise → Full-Year EPS and Revenue Both Above Consensus Management raised full-year FY26 revenue guidance to $62.8–$63.0 billion and adjusted EPS to $4.27–$4.29, both meaningfully above what Wall Street had been modeling. A $43.5 billion backlog of remaining performance obligations provides revenue visibility that makes the guidance feel conservative rather than aspirational.

Campus Networking Refresh → Second Growth Engine Beyond hyperscaler AI, Cisco described a “major multi-year, multi-billion-dollar campus networking refresh cycle underway” — broad-based enterprise demand that is entirely separate from the AI infrastructure story and yet equally powerful as a revenue driver. Total product orders excluding hyperscalers still grew 19% year-over-year.

Market Takeaway

For years, Cisco was the quintessential “value trap” — cheap on a price-to-earnings basis, defensible business, steady dividend, but no compelling reason for the stock to re-rate higher. That calculus changed last week. The AI infrastructure build-out requires not just chips and servers, but the networking fabric to connect them all — and Cisco’s Silicon One-powered switches and routers are winning that business at a scale that surprised even optimistic analysts. Nearly doubling the AI order target mid-year, combined with the campus networking refresh cycle running in parallel, gives Cisco two distinct and durable growth engines that weren’t in the model a year ago.

Yesterday’s JPMorgan conference appearance kept the story fresh, with the CEO’s “bigger than the dot-com era” framing likely resonating with institutional investors doing post-earnings deep dives. The next hard catalyst is Q4 FY26 earnings on August 12th, when the market will learn whether the implied $3.7 billion in additional AI orders actually materialized. A confirmation would validate the new narrative entirely. The risks to watch: Cisco’s margins face some pressure as it leans into hardware-intensive AI infrastructure, and some of the hyperscaler orders are lumpier than recurring software revenue — concentration in a few large customers creates quarter-to-quarter variability. But for traders looking at a stock that broke to an all-time high last week and still has a CEO actively reiterating the thesis at conferences this week, CSCO offers a momentum setup grounded in a genuinely transformed fundamental story.