Cisco to exceed Wall Street estimates

Computer networking firm Cisco Systems today said it would exceed Wall Street average estimates for second-quarter earnings per…

Computer networking firm Cisco Systems today said it would exceed Wall Street average estimates for second-quarter earnings per share and revenues - a surprise disclosure made hours before the company is due to report quarterly results.

Cisco said it inadvertently told a "large" number of employees that the company exceeded its goal for booked product orders in the quarter ended January 26th.

In pre-market trading, Cisco shares rose to $19.25 from Tuesday's close of $18.50.

Cisco said the memo stated booked orders for products were $3.9 billion in the quarter, above an internal goal of $3.75 billion. The memo, however, did not give specific information about revenue or earnings for the quarter, Cisco said.

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Cisco is scheduled to report second-quarter results after the market closes today.

"We felt that it was necessary to disclose this information publicly, given the broad internal distribution of the communication," said Mr Larry Carter, Cisco's chief financial officer in a statement.

Mr Nikos Theodosopoulos, an analyst with UBS Warburg, said he had no reason to believe the disclosure to employees was anything but inadvertent.

Mr Theodosopoulos also said he believes a decline in Cisco's business for serving large companies other than telecommunications firms has stopped, with operations in the United States and Europe showing some quarter-over-quarter improvements.

"The press release basically confirms what we thought," he said.

New securities regulations have put pressure on companies to disclose statements on financial results and expectations to the public, and to inform investors promptly if private disclosures are inadvertently made.