John Chambers, chairman and CEO of Cisco, takes part in a panel discussion discussing innovation for building social and economic value at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York
John Chambers, chairman and CEO of Cisco, takes part in a panel discussion discussing innovation for building social and economic value at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York, September 22, 2011. REUTERS

Shares of Cisco Systems shares fell 2.6 percent in early Wednesday trading to $17.84 as nervous investors await the first-quarter earnings announcement scheduled after the close.

Cisco shares have jumped 20 percent in the past three months, which could be an indicator the No. 1 vendor of Internet networking products has surmounted a rough patch. They tumbled after disappointing fourth-quarter results came out Aug. 10.

Analysts expect results from the San Jose, Calif.-based maker of hubs and routers for the Internet to be much better this time. If so, it's likely other technology leaders expected to report this month --- like Hewlett-Packard, Dell and Nvidia --- could signal a prosperous 2012 is coming.

Analysts expect Cisco to report net income around $1.8 billion, or 34 cents a share, down from 37 cents a year ago, as revenue increases about 3 percent to $11.01 billion.

There are three reasons underlying the estimates.

First is that Cisco still has to pay costs of restructuring in the third quarter, when it fired 6,500 employees and closed a factory in Mexico with another 5,000 workers. They could be as much as $300 million, far below the fourth quarter's $750 million.

To move more into the home and consumer electronics sector, Cisco acquired Scientific-Atlanta in 2006 for $6.9 billion. Now, it's been shutting factories where it made set-top boxes sold to carriers like Verizon Communications for its FiOS TV services.

Second, Cisco's revenue appears to have been relatively immune from what CEO John Chambers, 62, had warned would be a slowdown in orders from the public sector, or government agencies. They appear to have been overblown.

Jefferies analyst George Notter told clients it's too early to call a turnaround but confirmed his own checks of the supply chain indicate public sector sales were strong.

IBM, for example, reported its third quarter public sector sales were solid and that European orders were strong, despite fears of getting hammered by the European financial crisis.

Third, as the No. I provider of switches and routers, ahead of smaller vendors like Juniper Networks and Huawei Technologies, Cisco has apparently won major new orders from several top U.S. service providers, said analyst Rohit Chopra with Wedbush Securities.

These customers are giants like AT&T and Verizon Communications, which constantly upgrade networks to move more traffic. They account for about one third of Cisco's revenue.

Cisco may also have benefited from the management shakeup at rival HP, where CEO Leo Apotheker was ousted in favor of former eBay CEO Meg Whitman on Sept. 25. The shakeup may have distracted the sales staff as well as customers.

Also, CEO Chambers is respected for his management skills. The West Virginia native promised investors in August the company would be better managed for profitability ahead.

Cisco's lead independent director, Carol Bartz, 63, lost her job as CEO of Yahoo on Sept. 5. Among her fellow Cisco directors is Yahoo co-founder and former CEO Jerry Yang, 42.

Cisco's market capitalization is now about $96 billion, a far cry from 2000, when it was around $579 billion.