Cisco Beats Its Own Lowered Sales Estimates As Slowing U.S. Economy Bites

The slowing U.S. economy is biting a lot of tech companies hard, but Cisco – seen as a barometer of the tech industry by many on Wall Street – has managed to meet its own lowered financial forecasts and beat those of the analysts in its latest quarterly results.

The company posted sales of $9.79 billion in the three months ending April 26, up on analysts estimates of $9.75 billion, with earnings of $1.77 billion – 29 cents per share. That’s a drop in earnings of 5.4 percent from the same period last year.

Considering the relatively mixed economic environment we’re in, I think it was a really good quarter from a balance perspective and an execution perspective — we did what we said we were going to do," Jonathan Chadwick, Cisco’s corporate controller, said in an interview.

Cisco offered a sales guidance of 9 to 10 percent growth in the fourth quarter, with Cisco’s chief executive, John Chambers, saying on a conference call that he expects companies in the U.S. to remain cautious about spending until at least the end of 2008.

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