Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:) stock admittedly looks attractive at the moment. Cisco is a wonderful company, the dominant player in networking. And Cisco stock looks cheap. Shares are valued at just 14x the fiscal 2021 consensus earnings-per-share estimate. ThatâÂÂs a valuation that prices in little in the way of growth.

The problem of late is that Cisco isnâÂÂt posting much of that growth. Two consecutive earnings reports have disappointed investors and sent Cisco stock tumbling. Shares have recovered a 7.3% decline after the fiscal first-quarter report in mid-November. But CSCO stock still sits 18% below its 52-week high.
If that growth can return, Cisco stock can and likely will rally. But at the moment, thatâÂÂs a big âÂÂif,â and near-term upside will be limited unless and until Cisco can generate some optimism from the market.
The Key Question for CSCO Stock
CSCO has tumbled after each of its last two earnings reports. The November selloff followed an 8.6% decline in August resulting from the companyâÂÂs fiscal fourth-quarter release.
In both cases, the actual report wasnâÂÂt the culprit. Cisco beat analyst estimates on both lines in both quarters. In fact, the company hasnâÂÂt disappointed relative to Street expectations since 2014. Rather, CiscoâÂÂs outlook was the issue. Second-quarter guidance was particularly weak: Cisco expects revenue to decline 3% to 5% year-over-year. Earnings per share should increase by roughly the same amount, but all of that growth and then some is coming from share repurchases.
The question at the moment is whether the weakness seen in recent quarters simply is a short-term phenomenon. ThereâÂÂs some reason to believe that it is. The trade war has disrupted demand from China. After the first quarter report, Chief Financial Officer Kelly Kramer told BarronâÂÂs that orders from that country had .
5G wireless provides an opportunity, but not yet. CEO Chuck Robbins said on the Q1 conference call that those networks until the second half of fiscal 2021. Those sales should deliver some of the growth for which Cisco is looking. More broadly, networking demand simply seems soft, but should rebound at some point thanks to 5G and other factors.
The bull case, in short, is that the current situation will pass. Growth will return, and the multiple assigned to Cisco stock will expand. Something like 17x $4 in EPS â up from an expected $3.24 this year â gets CSCO stock near $70. Add in a 3% dividend yield, and total return equals roughly 50% in a matter of years.
The Risk to Cisco Stock
But the core worry is that recent quarters arenâÂÂt just the result of short-term factors. Rather, theyâÂÂre the sign of a reversion to the mean.
After all, end market growth for Cisco, particularly in the core networking business, remains minimal. Cisco has added software revenue to hardware sales with products like the Catalyst 9000 series of switches, but even that hasnâÂÂt been enough to drive real growth of late. Rival Juniper Networks (NYSE:) has been one of the S&P 500âÂÂs worst stocks over the past six years, gaining less than 9% total. Demand weakness is a key reason why.
Cisco has alleviated that pressure through software development and acquisitions. In fiscal 2019, for instance, applications revenue increased 15%. Security sales climbed 16%, thanks in large part to the purchase of Duo Security. Infrastructure platforms revenue, however, climbed just 7% â and that was a good year. That category actually saw sales decline in the first quarter.
If the software tailwind, in particular, fades, then perhaps CiscoâÂÂs growth stalls out. 5G is a help, but itâÂÂs not a panacea, as of Nokia (NYSE:) show. And this is a stock that has struggled in the recent past. In fact, from 2007 to 2017, CSCO stock basically had a lost decade, with annual share price appreciation in the 1% range.
One of the core questions here, as I noted last year, is whether Cisco is to Microsoft (NASDAQ:) or more akin to IBM (NYSE:). Can it, as Microsoft did, leverage a massive user base and the shift to the cloud to jumpstart growth? Or, as with IBMâÂÂs mainframes, is the customer demand problem simply too intractable for Cisco to change its profile?
Investors have reacted so strongly to the last two earnings reports because those questions still hover over Cisco stock. Cisco needs to give an answer to those questions for its shares to rebound.
The Case for CSCO
To be sure, thereâÂÂs an interesting case that itâÂÂs worth waiting for the answer. CiscoâÂÂs dividend yields almost 3% at a time when the 10-year Treasury bond yields less than 2%. For those of us who lived through 2000 and 2008, itâÂÂs difficult to think of a tech stock as âÂÂsafe.â But given CiscoâÂÂs dominant position, it may well be safer than many old-line âÂÂblue chips.âÂÂ
The one catch, even below $50, is that itâÂÂs tough to see that case as compelling. Growth concerns are real. Valuation is attractive, but there is no shortage of fellow Dow Jones components at low forward multiples: Walgreens Boots Alliance (NASDAQ:), Pfizer (NYSE:) and even fellow tech titan Intel (NASDAQ:). Those companies admittedly have their own challenges, but investors looking for âÂÂcheapâ stocks have options.
The issue at the moment is that Cisco still needs to prove that itâÂÂs the best of that bunch, and thus at least deserves the modest valuation premium it currently receives. The company hasnâÂÂt been able to do so over its last two quarters, and until it does, sideways trading will persist.
As of this writing, Vince Martin did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.
ÃÂ
The post appeared first on InvestorPlace.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.