By Juby Babu

May 13 (Reuters) – Cisco said on Wednesday it would cut nearly 4,000 jobs, as part of a restructuring aimed at shifting investment toward artificial intelligence and ‌related growth areas, and raised its annual revenue forecast after a surge in hyperscaler ‌orders.

Shares of the San Jose, California-based networking equipment maker rose more than 16% in extended trading.

“The companies that will win in ​the AI era will be those with focus, urgency, and the discipline to continuously shift investment toward the areas where demand and long-term value creation are strongest,” CEO Chuck Robbins said in a post on Cisco’s website.

The company said it was making strategic investments in silicon, optics, security and employees’ use ‌of AI across the company, as ⁠it reduces roles in some areas.

Cisco has taken $5.3 billion in AI infrastructure orders from hyperscalers so far this fiscal year, and raised its full-year order expectation ⁠to $9 billion from $5 billion previously.

“Though much will likely be made about a slight decrease in headcount, the post-market move we are seeing is truly the result of hyperscaler capex spilling downstream. This move validates that this ​capex ​is about more than just chips,” said Ryan Lee, ​Direxion’s senior vice president of product and ‌strategy.

Cisco is benefiting as companies expand spending beyond AI processors to the high-speed networks required to connect large data-center systems. Its networking product orders grew more than 50% in the third quarter compared to a year earlier, while data-center switching orders rose more than 40%.

Shares of the company have risen 32% this year.

On a post-earnings call, Cisco’s finance chief, Mark Patterson, said it is “reasonable” to expect ‌at least $6 billion of revenue on the AI hyperscale side ​in fiscal 2027.

The company reported revenue of $15.84 billion for ​the third quarter ended April 25, beating ​analysts’ average estimate of $15.56 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

It now expects ‌fiscal 2026 revenue in the range of $62.8 ​billion to $63 billion, compared with ​its earlier forecast of $61.2 billion to $61.7 billion.

Cisco will reduce its workforce by fewer than 4,000 jobs in the fourth quarter, representing less than 5% of its workforce. It had about ​86,200 employees as of July 26.

The ‌restructuring plan is expected to cost Cisco up to $1 billion, with about $450 million to ​be recognized in the fourth quarter and the remainder in fiscal 2027.

(Reporting by Juby ​Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)