Página 1 de 1

After Cisco em....

MensagemEnviado: 9/2/2005 0:34
por Marco

Como se cosegue ver o after hours...

MensagemEnviado: 9/2/2005 0:28
por bari
Já entrei no nasdaq.com e não consigo ver as cotações no after hours. Alguem me explica os proximos passos a dar :?:

MensagemEnviado: 8/2/2005 23:10
por Visitante
Cai 2,14% para17,85

MensagemEnviado: 8/2/2005 23:04
por luiz22
está a cair 1.86%

MensagemEnviado: 8/2/2005 23:04
por MC
Cisco Systems, Inc.
FECHO $18.24
ACTUAL $17.90 -1.86%
VOLUME 8,764,795

Já esteve a cotar 17,45

MensagemEnviado: 8/2/2005 22:55
por Visitante
Alguem confirma que as acções da Cisco estão a cair no "after hours"

Resultados Cisco

MensagemEnviado: 8/2/2005 22:12
por Visitante
Cisco's 2nd-Qtr Profit Rises 93% on Home-Networking Sales

Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Cisco Systems Inc., the world's largest maker of computer-networking equipment, said second- quarter profit almost doubled amid demand for devices that help consumers connect home offices to the Internet.

Net income was $1.4 billion, or 21 cents a share, compared with $724 million, or 18 cents, a year earlier, San Jose, California-based Cisco said in a statement distributed by Business Wire. Sales rose 12 percent to $6.06 billion. Excluding certain costs, profit was 22 cents, compared with the 22-cent average of 37 analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial.

Efforts by Chief Executive Officer John Chambers to expand into consumer products such as Linksys modems and routers paid off last quarter as holiday shoppers stocked up on home- networking equipment. Cisco doubled spending on acquisitions in 2004 to bulk up advanced technologies, which are growing more quickly than units that sell routers and switches to companies.

``Linksys is doing very well,'' said Aalok Shah, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities in Portland, Oregon, who rates Cisco shares ``outperform'' and doesn't personally own them. Consumers' high-speed Web hookups ``will be a growth driver for a couple of years,'' Shah said before the results were released.

In the period ended Jan. 29, the company was expected to record sales of $6.13 billion, the average estimate of 26 analysts surveyed. Chambers said on a Nov. 9 conference call that second-quarter sales would climb 1 percent to 3 percent from the preceding period. That implies revenue of as much as $6.15 billion.

Shares of Cisco rose 8 cents to $18.24 as of 4 p.m. in Nasdaq Stock Market composite trading. They have declined 78 percent since reaching a record $82 in March 2000, when the company had the world's highest market value.

Expanding New Businesses

Cisco spent $1.6 billion on acquisitions in 2004, mainly on companies to fold into the advanced technologies unit. J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. analyst Ehud Gelblum expected sales in that division, which includes areas such as wireless-Web access and network security, to surge 33 percent to $1.1 billion.

Cisco didn't immediately disclose second-quarter advanced technologies sales, which were $829 million a year earlier.

While Cisco's Linksys home-networking business and other newer areas are expanding at a faster pace than routers and switches, they're also less profitable.

Gross margin, or the percentage of revenue left after subtracting the cost of goods sold, was 66.9 percent, compared with 68.5 percent a year earlier.

Cisco Chief Financial Officer Dennis Powell said in November the margin would be 67 percent to 68 percent, while Lehman Brothers Inc. analyst Tim Luke, the top-rated telecommunications equipment analyst by Institutional Investor magazine, expected the ``lower end'' of that range.

Outlook

On a conference call today with analysts, Chambers may forecast a sales increase of 1 percent to 3 percent in the current quarter from the preceding period, Mark Sue, an analyst in New York at RBC Capital Markets, who rates Cisco stock ``outperform'' and doesn't personally own shares.

Powell said Dec. 7 during a presentation to analysts in San Jose, California, that Cisco expects to ``grow at the higher end'' a range of 10 percent to 15 percent a year through 2008.

Chambers, who gained $38.3 million by exercising options to purchase Cisco shares in fiscal 2004, faces price competition in China, where Huawei Technologies Co. and other rivals are offering cheaper products.

Growth in the world's most-populous country may also be crimped as customers take time off to celebrate the Chinese New Year, which lasts from tomorrow until Feb. 15, and because ``counterfeit products continue to plague Cisco,'' RBC's Sue wrote in a research note dated Feb. 1.