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Iran Conflict 2026
30MAR

Cisco cuts 4,000 on a record quarter

3 min read
08:00UTC

Cisco cut roughly 4,000 staff the same day it reported record $15.8bn revenue, lifting its AI-infrastructure order target to about $9bn and making a fifth straight week of record-revenue firms cutting deep.

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Key takeaway

AI-infrastructure suppliers can grow their order books while shrinking the workforce that fills them.

Cisco cut roughly 4,000 staff, under 5% of its 86,000-strong workforce, on 14 May 2026, the same day it reported record quarterly revenue of $15.8bn, up 12% year on year. 1 Chief executive Chuck Robbins lifted the company's AI-infrastructure order target to about $9bn for the 2026 financial year, up from a prior $5bn, and redirected the freed budget into custom silicon and high-speed networking.

Cisco builds the plumbing of the AI boom, switches, routers and the networking gear data centres run on, so its order book is a demand gauge for the build-out itself. The restructuring carries a charge of up to $1bn, mostly severance, front-loaded against an order book Cisco expects to grow by roughly 80%. The Firm selling the picks and shovels is shrinking the workforce that makes them, which is the counter-signal worth holding: infrastructure demand accelerating while supplier headcount falls.

Cisco joins a run of firms cutting on the day they beat. CBOE shed a fifth of its staff on a record quarter , and Cloudflare cut 1,100 on record revenue citing a 600% internal surge in AI use . Microsoft opened voluntary retirement for 8,750 US employees in the same window . For workers, a record quarter from an employer has become the moment cuts arrive rather than a defence against them.

The market reads it the same way the executives do. Equities now price a one-off severance charge at peak revenue as a quality signal, a structurally lower wage bill bought cheaply, which is why the trade recurs weekly rather than once a cycle. The historical logic that firms cut in downturns no longer holds; here the beat is the cue.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Cisco makes the routers, switches and networking equipment that connects the internet. It also makes the specialised hardware that data centres need to run AI workloads at speed, making it a direct supplier to the AI infrastructure boom. On 14 May 2026, Cisco reported its best quarterly revenue ever: $15.8 billion, up 12% on the same period last year. On the same day, it announced it was cutting about 4,000 jobs, under 5% of its roughly 86,000 employees. The company's chief executive, Chuck Robbins, explained that the money saved on salaries would be redirected into custom AI chips and high-speed networking products. A restructuring of this size carries a one-off cost (up to $1 billion, mostly redundancy payments), but those are offset within a year or two by the permanent reduction in the salary bill. The AI infrastructure orders Cisco expects to receive in 2026 would total about $9 billion, up from a prior target of $5 billion, meaning the company is betting that building the hardware layer for AI is worth more than the workforce it currently has. Cboe and Cloudflare ran the same pattern in the same fortnight. Cboe, a major financial exchange, cut 20% of staff on record Q1 revenue the week before. Cloudflare, an internet security company, cut 1,100 workers on record revenue a week after that, blaming a 600% jump in internal AI use. Each of these companies had record earnings and still chose to cut.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Cisco's specific driver is the shift in its order book from software-centric, subscription-based revenue (which it built between 2015 and 2023) to hardware-intensive AI-infrastructure orders.

Custom silicon and high-speed interconnects require engineering specialists at the chip and system level, not the customer-success, sales-engineering and software-delivery roles that dominated its 2015-2023 hiring cohort. The freed headcount budget does not automatically translate into chip engineers: Cisco is paying severance to one group while competing for a scarce supply of semiconductor talent.

The pattern extending to Cboe and Cloudflare suggests this is not Cisco-specific but reflects a structural shift in technology company cost allocation: AI tool adoption reduces the human-touch layer of product delivery, and the productivity gain is extracted immediately as a wage-bill reduction, not deferred until AI capability is proven at scale.

UBS chief economist Arend Kapteyn attributed record-low white-collar turnover in early 2026 partly to 'AI fear' , and the Cisco announcement validates that fear in a high-profile case.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Cisco's $9bn AI infrastructure order target, if met, will increase capital spending on servers and interconnects by $4bn year-on-year; none of that spending flows into the roles eliminated.

  • Risk

    The record-revenue-plus-layoffs pattern across five consecutive weeks (Cboe, Cloudflare, Cisco) signals to workers that strong employer performance no longer provides job security in AI-exposed technology roles.

First Reported In

Update #10 · Rival studies split on AI's hit to jobs

The Tech Portal· 24 May 2026
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