Huawei gearing up to take on Cisco on its home turf

Updated 14 May 2012
Follow

Huawei gearing up to take on Cisco on its home turf

NEW YORK: Huawei’s head of research and development in North America said his company is more than ready to take on larger rival Cisco Systems but noted it will take some patience — and time.
“The US is by far our most complex market ... for us our entrance into the US is similar to a western company entering China,” John Roese said in an interview on the sidelines of IT infrastructure conference Interop in Las Vegas.
For a decade, China-based Huawei with US headquarters in Plano, Texas, has been selling infrastructure to US telecom operators. It sells routers and switches that move data through networks and devices such as modems and smartphones, but now it aims to provide equipment to large businesses, a market dominated by Cisco Systems.
Huawei in September of last year launched its enterprise unit and aims to generate $15 billion worldwide in revenue by 2015. This year it sees deals totaling more than $7 billion worldwide and expects to invest $4.5 billion in research and development.
The enterprise unit provides equipment such as hubs, routers and switches that run networks transferring data across corporations.
“We basically said it will take a few years to get to critical mass but the US is not critical to our revenue objective,” Roese said.
Huawei’s enterprise unit revenue rose 57.1 percent in 2011 to 9.16 billion yuan ($1.45 billion), making it the fastest growing division though it contributes only 4.5 percent of total revenue.
Roese, a technology veteran who has worked at Nortel, Broadcom, Enterasys and Cabletron, said the company had not publicly set any financial goals for the US market but he made it clear that Huawei has what it takes to be a formidable rival to Cisco in the US.
FROM: REUTERS
Cisco is the world’s leading maker of networking gear.
“There really has not been a legitimate major competitor for Cisco for a long time ... and in comes Huawei and we are not a small player,” Roese said.
Cisco’s Chief Executive John Chambers has repeatedly called Huawei its toughest rival in the enterprise market and promised to be compete aggressively.
In 2003, Cisco sued Huawei for allegedly infringing on some of its patents. Huawei removed the contested parts and the case was dropped.
Cisco’s executive vice president Rob Lloyd implied that Huawei was still imitating and not innovating and questioned its security credentials:
“We clearly know that our customers view innovation from Cisco and they don’t see the same from Huawei. We would clearly say that imitation isn’t innovation,” Lloyd said on the company’s earnings call this past Tuesday.
“The privacy of information, how data is protected is forefront in our customers’ mind in a cloud centric world. That’s not the forte of Huawei,” Lloyd also said.
Roese shrugged off the comments.
“If they want to declare us public enemy No 1 and their biggest threat, I am glad to take that compliment,” Roese said, adding that currently Huawei was still too small a player in the US to compete with Cisco.
But it’s certainly gearing up to take on Cisco.
Huawei this week announced its first US distribution agreement with IT-distributor Synnex that will allow it to expand its presence in the US enterprise market
It is also launching new products that compete with Cisco’s telepresence offerings and network switches.
Still, the US has been a difficult market for Huawei to crack as some US politicians are wary of the company’s secretive founder and Chief Executive Ren Zhengfei, a former Chinese military officer. There are also concerns regarding the security of its hardware.
Roese said Huawei was currently not doing business with the US. federal government or the financial services market.
“We have to get a few things behind us before we can sell to the federal government,” Roese said.
Huawei has been at pains to overcome national security concerns in the US and was dealt a fresh blow this week when the House of Representatives Armed Services Committee adopted legislation that included a measure to root out any technology produced by Huawei in the United States nuclear weapons complex.
Roese added that it did not have the necessary distribution channels needed to serve the financial services industry yet.
The company is focused on supplying businesses in the health care industry and education sector with its products such as telepresence equipment and data center switches, Roese said.
“We are definitely in a building phase and we are very patient,” Roese said and quipped that thanks to Cisco the company was at least getting some free advertisement.
“I joke that our biggest ally in educating people who we are has been Mr. Chambers. He has done a fantastic job teaching people how to pronounce our name.”


Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 11,183

Updated 16 February 2026
Follow

Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 11,183

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index dipped on Monday, losing 44.79 points, or 0.4 percent, to close at 11,183.85.

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index was SR4.05 billion ($1.08 billion), as 69 of the listed stocks advanced, while 191 retreated.

The MSCI Tadawul Index decreased, down 6.63 points or 0.44 percent, to close at 1,504.73.

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu lost 328.20 points, or 1.36 percent, to close at 23,764.92. This comes as 22 of the listed stocks advanced, while 49 retreated.

The best-performing stock was Maharah Human Resources Co., with its share price surging by 7.26 percent to SR6.50.

Other top performers included Arabian Cement Co., which saw its share price rise by 6.27 percent to SR22.71, and Saudi Research and Media Group, which saw a 4.3 percent increase to SR104.30.

On the downside, the worst performer of the day was Arabian Internet and Communications Services Co., whose share price fell by 8.01 percent to SR207.80.

Jahez International Co. for Information System Technology and Al-Rajhi Co. for Cooperative Insurance also saw declines, with their shares dropping by 5.61 percent and 4.46 percent to SR12.79 and SR75, respectively.

On the announcement front, Etihad Etisalat Co. announced its financial results for 2025 with a 7.9 percent year-on-year growth in its revenues, to reach SR19.6 billion.

In a Tadawul statement, Mobily said that this growth is attributed to “the expansion of all revenue streams, with a healthy growth in the overall subscriber base.”

Mobily delivered an 11.6 percent increase in net profit, reaching SR3.4 billion in 2025 compared to SR3.1 billion in 2024.

The company’s share price reached SR67.85, marking a 0.37 percent increase on the main market.