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Juniper Networks - Q1 2021

April 27, 2021

Transcript

Speaker 0

Greetings, and welcome to Juniper Networks First Quarter 2021 Financial Results Conference Call. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn this conference over to your host, Mr. Jeff Lubert, VP of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

You may begin.

Speaker 1

Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and welcome to our Q1 2021 conference call. Are joining me today are Rami Rahim, Chief Executive Officer and Ken Miller, Chief Financial Today's call contains certain forward looking statements based on our current expectations. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, and will be available on the call to the call. Our forward looking statements speak only as of today, Juniper undertakes no obligation to update any forward looking statements.

Our discussion today will include non GAAP financial results. Reconciliation information can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website under Financial Reports. Commentary on why we consider non GAAP information a useful view of the company's financial results is included in today's press release. Following our prepared remarks, we will take questions. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up.

With that, I will now hand the call over to Ron.

Speaker 2

Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call to discuss our Q1 2021 results. We delivered have strong results during the March quarter. Revenue exceeded our expectations and we experienced year over year growth across all verticals and geographies. Are in the range of $1,000,000,000. Near term visibility is strong and given the momentum we are seeing, we now expect to grow our business 4% to 5% participants are in the range of 2021 on a full year basis.

The success we're seeing is due in large part to deliberate actions we have taken to both strengthen our portfolio and enhance our go to market organization. Our focus on leading the industry is delivering are in a superior end user experience, what we call experience first networking, is resonating in the market. And our deliberate focus on specific customer solutions is enabling us to accelerate our success across the areas we serve. Are in the market, but also enhancing the success of the broader Juniper portfolio. Our go to market organization is are executing well and the investments we have made over the last few years are paying off in the form of improved productivity and customer diversity.

We are continuing to invest in both product differentiation and our go to market organization. I remain confident these actions will not only position us to benefit from any potential improvements in end market conditions, but also to capture share as several large Industry transitions unfold. There are several opportunities that are beginning to play out where we feel strong about our position. First, the enterprise transition to AI driven cloud operations, where our Mist AI offering, which was enhanced by the acquisition of 128 Technology, helps customers streamline operations, reduce costs and optimize end user experiences. This client to cloud differentiation is truly resonating.

2nd is the cloud and service provider transition to 400 gig systems, where we're continuing to see success both in wide area as well as data center use cases. Our 400 gig solutions are highly competitive and we remain optimistic in our ability to not only protect our footprint, Last but not least, the service provider, 5 gs and metro markets, which we view as a large opportunity that is likely will see healthy growth over the next several years. We are playing to win in the service provider vertical and believe our investments in automation technologies such as NetRounds and the introduction of new metro oriented solutions such as the award winning ACX-seven thousand one hundred family should position us to gain share in this attractive portion of the market where historically we've had limited presence. I firmly believe we're taking share and that the investments we're making will position us to not only capitalize on the big market opportunities that will unfold over We believe our plans will enable us to emerge from the pandemic stronger than we entered and deliver are in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in

Speaker 3

a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be in a position to be

Speaker 2

in a position to be in a position to be in a position and address some of the key developments we're seeing from a customer solutions perspective. Starting with our automated WAN solutions, which saw strong double digit revenue growth year over year and exceeded our own expectations in Q1. We experienced strength with both our service provider and cloud customers, each of which delivered double digit sales growth year over year. We grew in all geographies year over year and momentum is healthy entering the June period. In the service provider vertical, our diversification strategy It's continuing to yield positive results, and we remain optimistic regarding the outlook for our Cloud Metro These solutions are highly competitive and well positioned to win in one of the fastest growing portions of the service provider routing market.

As I mentioned previously, we are playing to win in the service provider market and I remain optimistic regarding the outlook for our automated WAN solutions in this important vertical. I'd also like to highlight that our automated WAN portfolio had particularly strong orders from our cloud participants in Q1. While our strength was across multiple hyperscale accounts, we also saw improved activity with our largest optimistic regarding the outlook for our wide area solutions, particularly in areas where we maintain incumbency are well positioned to benefit from form a big tailwinds that are likely to start ramping later this year. And for the year, We are confident in our outlook for our automated land solution. We expect 2021 results to be slightly above high end of the long term forecast range we provided at our February Investor Day calling for a 1% decline to 3% growth.

While our cloud ready data center solutions declined 10% year over year during Q1, orders grew nearly are in the range of 30% year over year due to broad based strength across our cloud, enterprise and service provider customers. Participants. Win rates improved and we saw a material increase in average deal size in the quarter. Aster exceeded our expectations and is already enabling us to win data center opportunities we likely wouldn't have been able to secure if we hadn't completed the deal in January. Customer interest in our cloud ready data center portfolio is high and we remain optimistic regarding the outlook for this business.

While the Q1 revenue decline in our cloud ready data center business was almost entirely due to expected weakness at a single large For the year, we believe our cloud ready data center business remains on track to achieve the long term forecast rate we highlighted at our Investor Day looking for 5% to 9% growth despite the slow revenue start to the year. Finally, our AI driven enterprise solutions experienced double digit growth year over year and exceeded expectations in the March quarter. Our Mist AI differentiation continues to resonate in the market as new logos nearly doubled in Q1 and missed orders experienced another quarter of triple digit growth with a record number of deals greater than $1,000,000 approximately doubled year over year and we saw record EX pull through in Q1. In addition to strength With large Fortune 500 customers, we are also experiencing continued strength in the channel and improved momentum with smaller commercial accounts, which highlight the value of our AI driven enterprise offering to customers of all sizes and across all verticals. We believe Mist dotai continues to offer unique and market leading differentiation, resulting in the best have a great day to day basis.

To enhance this leadership, we continue to bring new innovations to market that should further accelerate our success in in

Speaker 3

the future periods. Some of

Speaker 2

the innovations we have recently announced include the industry's first campus switch are in the range of $1,400,000 which provides customers with ease of setup, best participants are in class fabric management, security, scale and AI driven troubleshooting to find needle in Haystack problems like misconfigured VLANs and bad cables. Add to that, the mystification of our SRX branch gateway, which allows automated onboarding and configuration using Mist AI and the cloud, coupled with And the integration of 128 Technologies' session smart routing with Mist WAN Assurance and virtual network assisted capabilities to deliver the industry's 1st AI driven SD WAN solution, which includes customizable service levels and proactive problem resolution on top of the already unique SessionSmart capabilities are in the range of Juniper's SD WAN solution. While it remains early, we are seeing strong customer interest in 120 Technologies are in line with a large global enterprise and won opportunities in the U. S. Federal vertical.

We are excited about are mystification of 128 Technology and are focusing our attention on sales enablement and leveraging the Juniper go to market organization to accelerate 128 Technologies' success. I remain encouraged by the momentum we are seeing in this business and remain confident our AI driven enterprise solutions are likely to see double digit growth in 2021. Our security revenue experienced strong results during the March quarter and orders exceeded expectations in the period. Strength was especially notable in the high end of the market, although we saw growth across call. We believe our connected security strategy is resonating in the market We're also benefiting from recent third party validation highlighting the superior efficacy of our products from reputable firms such as Gartner, ICFA and Cyber Ratings.

We believe these dynamics will continue to provide tailwinds in future quarters and should enable us to grow our security business during the current year. Our software and related services revenue grew 7% in the March quarter As strong growth in our ratable subscription offerings such as NIST and healthy uptake of our Flex on box software offerings were partially offset by lower sales of certain older products that carry a high level of perpetual software. ARR grew 28% are participating in the quarter, rising more than 70% on a year over year basis subscription offerings and improved adoption of our on box Flex licenses, which are seeing traction across all of the customer verticals we serve. Based on the momentum we are seeing, we remain optimistic regarding the outlook for our overall software business as well as the long term targets we presented at our recent Investor Day. I'd like to mention that our services team delivered another solid quarter and continue to grow on a year over year basis due to strong renewals and service tax rate.

Our services team continues to execute extremely well to ensure our customers receive an excellent experience. I would like to extend my thanks to our customers, partners and shareholders for their continued support and confidence in Juniper. And I especially want to thank our employees for their hard work and dedication, which is essential to creating value for our stakeholders. I will now turn the call over to Ken, will discuss our quarterly financial results in more detail.

Speaker 3

Thank you, Rami, and good afternoon, everyone. I will start by discussing our Q1 results and end with some color on our outlook. We ended the Q1 of 2021 At $1,074,000,000 in revenue and non GAAP earnings per share of 0 point Revenue was up 8% year over year with growth across all verticals and geographies. Looking at our revenue by vertical, on a year over year basis, service provider grew 17%, cloud grew 3% and enterprise grew 1%. As expected, all verticals declined on a sequential basis.

Orders were strong in the Q1 with growth in the mid teens on a year over year basis, with particular strength in our cloud and enterprise verticals. As we discussed at our Investor Day in February, this is the Q1 of our updated revenue reporting, are pivoting from technology categories to customer solutions. The customer solution categories are automated WAN solutions, are in the cloud

Speaker 4

ready data center and

Speaker 3

AI driven enterprise. As we have discussed, this change better aligns our revenue reporting are 2 key growth drivers that is aligned with our strategy. Looking at revenue by customer solution, automated WAN solutions increased Cloud ready data center revenue decreased 10% year over year. While the timing of shipments impacted revenue results, orders saw strong growth in the quarter. And finally, AI driven enterprise revenue increased 12% versus last year.

Our MISC and EX product families both grew year over year. As Rami mentioned, total software and related services revenue was $143,000,000 an increase of 7% year over year. And our annual recurring revenue, or ARR, grew 28% year over year. Total security revenue, which includes security products as well as services related to our security solutions was $163,000,000 an increase of 11% year over year. In reviewing our top 10 customers for the quarter, 5 were cloud, 4 were service provider and 1 was an enterprise.

Our top 10 customers accounted for 31% of our total revenue as compared to 33% in Q1 are in the range of 20. Non GAAP gross margin was 59.3%, which was above the midpoint of our guidance, are in the range of $1,000,000 primarily due to higher revenue. If it weren't for the pandemic related elevated logistics and other supply chain related participants will be in the range of $1,000,000,000 to $1,000,000,000 to $1,000,000,000 of approximately 60%. Non GAAP operating expenses increased are in the same period last year. We exited the quarter with total cash, cash equivalents and investments of $1,800,000,000 Cash flow from operations was $180,000,000 From a capital return perspective, we paid $65,000,000 in dividends, reflecting a quarterly dividend of $0.20 per share and repurchased $125,000,000 worth of shares in the Q1.

Turning to our guidance. As I'm sure you are aware, there is a worldwide shortage of semiconductors impacting many industries. Similar to others, we are experiencing ongoing supply constraints, which have resulted in extended lead times. We have invested to strengthen our supply chain and have increased inventory levels over the course of the last year. We continue to work closely with our suppliers to further enhance our resiliency and mitigate disruptions outside of our control.

Despite these actions, we believe extended lead times will likely persist for the next few quarters. While the situation is dynamic, At this point in time, we believe we will have access to sufficient semiconductor supply to meet our full year financial forecast. Looking specifically at the Q2, at the midpoint of guidance, revenue is expected to be up 5% year over year. We We expect our 2nd quarter non GAAP gross margins to benefit from higher volume and incremental software mix, We expect non GAAP operating expense to increase sequentially, primarily due to the investments we are making to take advantage of future market opportunities. Moving on to our expectations for 2021.

We have updated our full year revenue growth and profitability expectations to account for the are higher than our previous expectation of 3% to 4%. From a vertical perspective for 2021, Enterprise revenue is expected to grow the fastest. Cloud is expected to grow towards the high end of our long term model range participants are now expected to be flat to slightly up versus last year. At this time, our revenue and non GAAP earnings expectations remain unchanged for the second half of the year relative to the forecast we provided during our Q4 2020 earnings call. While non GAAP gross margin can be difficult to predict, we continue to expect non GAAP gross margin to be approximately 60%, are consistent with what we said on our Q4 2020 earnings call as well as at our February 2021 Investor Day.

Slightly up versus 2020 levels. We expect non GAAP OI and E to remain near Q2 2021 levels through the course of the year. In closing, I'd like to thank our team for their continued dedication and commitment to Juniper's success, especially in this challenging environment.

Speaker 0

Our first question comes from the line of Rod Hall with Goldman back. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 2

Yes. Hi, guys. Thanks for

Speaker 4

the questions. I guess I wanted to dig into this order volume in a couple of ways. 1, Maybe Ken, you could talk about book to bill or could

Speaker 3

you give us a book

Speaker 4

to bill number? And then secondly, more qualitatively, the software orders that are so strong, could you guys dive into a little bit of color on that. What particular things are driving that? Is it missed or just give us some prioritization of where those software orders are coming from? Thanks.

Speaker 2

Thanks for the question, Rod. Let me start with the software and then I'll pass it over to Ken. So obviously, very pleased with the momentum in our software business, 70% year over year growth in orders, are particularly pleased with ARR momentum at 28% year over year. So the way we're running the business right now is with an intense focus are on our customer solutions, AI Driven Enterprise, Cloud Ready Data Center and Automated LAN. Each of these solutions has an embedded and a meaningful software component that we have invested in that drives significant differentiation in the market And that ultimately delivers on our strategy of experience versus networking.

So you can't sell an AI driven enterprise solution without Actually also selling a meaningful software component along with it. That is what is driving the momentum, especially in off box Software offerings like Mist. And then I know it's early, but increasingly in solutions like Apstra as well. In addition to that is the Flex licensing model. This is a really simple on box licensing model that gives customers the flexibility to choose what particular features and scale they want along with the traditional systems that they deploy in their network.

So that combination is working very well for us. I feel very good about our ability to achieve our long term targets that we provided to you in the recent analyst events. And I think we're going to continue to see good solid momentum in the software space.

Speaker 3

And I'll just add on the software side. You did see very strong bookings growth of 70 plus percent. You see revenue was at 7%. The delta there, deferred software revenue, which actually shows up predominantly in our service deferred revenue. So we are seeing some of the bookings, even when we fulfill it, it doesn't show up in revenue right away as it gets recognized over time and that's really our ARR business, which is also a very strong grower for us this quarter.

From a book to bill perspective, we don't disclose the number, Rob, but I could tell you it's clearly over 1. I mean, we grew backlog both year over year and We don't typically grow backlog sequentially in Q1. This is something that due to the kind of unexpected order strength that we saw, the mid teens quarter's growth really resulted in a backlog growth quarter for us and a book to bill greater than 1. Great.

Speaker 4

Okay. Thanks a lot, guys.

Speaker 2

Sure.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Amit Dariani with Evercore. You may proceed with your question. Participants.

Speaker 5

Thanks for taking my questions as well. I guess I have one question and a follow-up. On the enterprise side, maybe to start with, it PureCircle, your solutions, especially wrapped with Mist, is resonating well with customers. But as I think about the positivity that you have around enterprise, Is it really think about how much of that is really driven by a cyclical upshift given budget getting better on the enterprise side versus perhaps Share gain that you're seeing versus the incumbents?

Speaker 2

Yes, Amit, I have no doubt in the enterprise we're taking share And it's on the back of some really meaningful and differentiated solutions and technologies that we've introduced into the market. And In the enterprise space, there might be some COVID related tailwinds in some areas of the enterprise, but there are a lot of headwinds in certain segments of the enterprise. And I think the team has done a phenomenal job of pivoting rapidly to focus in areas where The enterprise spending is going to be more COVID resilient and then add to that the differentiation that we've built both Organically and inorganically. And AI Driven Enterprise really powered by Mist, double digit growth, are in the line with us. Pretty much every customer vertical.

New logos are growing very rapidly at 2x year over year, A record number of $1,000,000 deals. Like I said, I'm very confident that this is share taking growth.

Speaker 5

Got it. And then, if I could just follow-up on the supply chain side, I think you imply that 70 basis point Margin headwind from logistics supply chain issues in the quarter. How do you see that number stack up as you go through the year? And then did you have any revenue that you have on the table, given the supply chain issues as well?

Speaker 2

Before I let Ken answer that specific I just want to say, this is a worldwide shortage. It's affecting practically every tech company across all industries. So what Juniper is experiencing, I don't think is unique. Having said that, I have a lot of confidence in the strength of our Really starting over a year ago that's helping us right now. So there's no doubt, there are going to be some challenges that we need to work around, but I I have a lot of confidence in the strength of the team and the relationships that we have with our suppliers and pulling through this.

And Ken, why don't you provide some additional color?

Speaker 3

Yes. And As you mentioned, the impact in Q1 was about 70 basis points and that is predominantly logistics and kind of some of the COVID related costs that we've been talking about the last couple of quarters. And The freight cost per pound per kilogram are still significantly elevated versus pre COVID levels. We expect that to maintain for the next quarters. It's going to be difficult to predict when that's going to normalize, but I do expect that to normalize eventually.

But I do think it's going to take a few more quarters for that to normalize. In addition to that, we are starting to factor in some potential cost creep from a components perspective due to the supply constraints that we've mentioned before. So We have factored in some cost to component cost increase into our current forecast. We still believe 60% is the right target for us on a full year basis for this year despite some of these incremental costs, but it's something we're watching very closely and we'll obviously be managing it aggressively as we have been and we'll continue to keep you guys updated as we go. There is a fair amount of uncertainty there, but based on our current expectations, we feel that the 60% target that we have for the year still holds true.

From a revenue loss perspective, we are seeing extended lead times. So that means an order that we would book might not recognize in the same period as it would have Otherwise, however, we feel that the revenue results we just posted in Q1, the guidance we just put out there for Q2 are quite strong based on the demand strength that we're seeing and we feel good about our participants are ready to procure the supply we need to hit our revenue forecast.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Simon Leopold with Raymond James, you may proceed with your questions.

Speaker 4

Thank you. Appreciate that. First, I wanted to see if maybe you could unpack your cloud vertical a little bit. And where I'm going with this question is we've gotten the impression that you tend to be disproportionately stronger in What's often called Tier 2, Tier 3 as opposed to hyperscale. Is there some insight you can offer to help us understand the dynamics of Maybe breaking up that cloud vertical?

Thanks.

Speaker 2

Yes. Simon, thanks for the question. Our position in the cloud vertical, including hyperscale is actually quite unique. The share that we have with hyperscale routing in particular is second to none in the industry, I believe. So the strength that we saw in Q1 was actually very broad based.

Certainly, hyperscale contributed to that momentum. And the nice thing about the hyperscale momentum that we're seeing right now is that it's not just about 1 or even 2 accounts. It's fairly well Distributed, there's good amount of diversification within hyperscale. After that, the cloud majors, which are the smaller International cloud providers that have also contributed to that momentum. So in Q1, we saw double digit growth in routing, again, Based on the footprint that we enjoy, switching was down, but only because of a particular use case in one customer That's essentially a wide area use case.

I've actually talked about this in the last 1 or 2 earnings calls. But I will note here that even in that use case, we've now started to see a resumption of spend by our large customer that deploys it in this manner. And in orders up 30%, nearly 30% year over year, again, it's indicative participants are in the position that we have. I mean, I think the way you should look at cloud providers today is there is certainly competition that's happening for future build out, especially in 400 gig, I feel very good about the competitive nature of our solutions, The engagements with our cloud provider customers that I think will bode well for us in the future, especially as you get into the second half of this year and next year, participants are in the same store. But then to benefit from the investments that hyperscale and the broader cloud major customers have today, you need to have the footprint and we have the footprint.

Speaker 4

Thanks. And just to sorry, go ahead, Ken.

Speaker 3

Sorry, Simon. I just wanted to clarify in aggregate. If you look at our cloud vertical in aggregate, our hyperscale number is the larger piece. It's bigger than our Tier 2, Tier 3 or cloud majors piece. But it is predominantly, as Ramy mentioned, it's the Wide area networking use cases are routing footprint that we've enjoyed there for so many years.

Where we're seeing growth on the Cloud majors or the Tier 2, Tier 3 side is really in the data center side. And that's where we're seeing more mix towards switching in our cloud ready data center solutions to the Tier 2, Tier 3. And we're obviously trying to break into the hyperscale and data center side, but right now our footprint is predominantly on the automated WAN solutions.

Speaker 4

Great. Appreciate that. Just as my follow-up, I wanted to see if we could talk a little bit about your intentions in terms of market share on The enterprise campus, both switching and wireless LAN, what's a realistic expectation for how many points of market share do look forward. Thanks.

Speaker 2

Yes. Well, I think we're focusing on areas of the campus and branch markets that are fastest growing that I think will see the quickest recovery Because of COVID, we're doing really well. And I think, again, this is on as a result of the significant differentiation that we have in the market. And I would also just add that, that differentiation is very difficult to replicate. I mean, we now have 5 years participants are in the market that's given our capabilities really some solid differentiation.

This is going to be the fastest growing vertical for Juniper, enterprise all up and campus is a very significant component of the enterprise. And as a result of that, we have been taking share over the last several years and I think we're going to continue to take meaningful share going forward.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 4

This is Joe Cardoso on for Sonic Strategy. My first question is just on the service provider vertical. It's sounding much better than when you guys last spoke on it. So first of all, is that a fair comment? And if so, can you help us understand what is driving the improved outlook and visibility there?

Speaker 2

Yes, I'd be happy to. So obviously delighted with the ServiceVider momentum in Q1, Strong revenue performance, partially explained by an easy compare relative to last year, but I would say that it did exceed are our expectations, including from an order standpoint. And what I really like about our performance in the service provider space is The diversity, both from the standpoint of geography, this is not a North America phenomenon or a European phenomenon, it's broad based across every geography. The diversity of solutions and technologies, so we're seeing strength in routing as you would expect, but we're also seeing strength in security in the service provider space and we continue to invest in new line cards, new software capabilities, but we're starting to see some good PTX momentum And solid 400 gig wins in competitive bids with service providers. And last but not least, I will add that participants are in the line with our expectations.

Tier 1 U. S. Service provider spending has actually been weak over the last year or so as we've outlined in previous earnings calls, but we've actually seen a bit more, let's say, signs of life or redemption in spending by some Tier 1 operators as well, which is encouraging. Add to that the differentiation. We've introduced just in the Q1 timeframe our Paragon Automation And this really addresses a real need in the market for the types of tools that customers are looking for, for planning and provisioning and insights and assurance.

And then we also launched our cloud metro strategy, which is really our big push into the metro space and announced High density, high capacity solution to address the future of 5 gs that's for build outs and that's a net new opportunity for Uniper. We've traditionally not had any meaningful presence here, but we expect that to contribute to our revenue performance over the next few years. So it's for that reason that we're now tracking up to the high end of our long term model for this full year, 2021. Yes, Joe.

Speaker 3

As you heard in our prepared remarks, we did bring the full year outlook up from a revenue perspective. It was 3% to 4% earlier in the year, now we're up to 4% to 5% on a full year basis. The vertical that actually came up the most was our service provider vertical. We were talking before about it being further stabilization. If you recall 2020, We were down 4% on a full year basis and we thought we would get closer to 0 this year from negative 4% to something closer to 0.

That's the furthest stabilization. We're now calling SP based on the strength of the first half to be flat to slightly up on a full year basis, which as Rami mentioned, is more in line with our long term model, actually the high end of our long term model, Previously, we were kind of tracking towards the low end. So we are seeing some strength in SP, particularly here in the first half.

Speaker 4

And then my second question is just on the acquisitions. You spent a lot of time in the prepared remarks highlighting the different acquisitions you recently completed in contributing to better outlook in part due to them. I guess just kind of diving in there, is there a particular acquisition that you Hi, guys. I'm driving a better outlook or has it been more broad based? Any color would be appreciated.

Thank you.

Speaker 2

Yes. Well, so we recently crossed the 2 year anniversary since the close of Mist and that continues to do phenomenally well for us. And Mist are doing incredibly well, right? Like I said, doubling new logos, record number of $1,000,000 deals, etcetera. The other acquisitions are still a little bit newer, so it's still earlier, but I'm very encouraged based on what I'm seeing thus far.

Astrid, as an example, has seen early interest customers out there that are looking for the ability to deploy private cloud, but are fearful of the operational complexity of private cloud And Astra provides the best solution that's truly multi vendor. So it's not just working on top of Juniper underlay, Any vendor's underlay solution to provide that seamless, easy, intent based private cloud experience, There is a need in the market and I firmly believe we have the best technology for it right now. 128 Technology, Federal government is especially interested in the security aspects of 128 technology. So Even though it's early, I'm actually quite optimistic about what we're seeing thus far.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Aaron Rakers with Wells Fargo. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 1

Hi, this is Jake Wilhelm on for Aaron, first of all, congrats on a great quarter. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about your visibility into your cloud customers' inventory levels Maybe how that has changed?

Speaker 3

I'm sorry, you broke up a little bit there. Jake, could you repeat the question on the

Speaker 2

Sorry

Speaker 3

about that. I was wondering if

Speaker 1

you could talk about visibility into your cloud customers' inventory levels and how that has changed?

Speaker 2

Got it. So yes, I mean, with our cloud customers first, the momentum since the beginning of the year has been phenomenal. It's Always difficult to predict cloud demand on a quarter by quarter basis. However, I would say that if you take a look at how their businesses are doing. I haven't seen the latest headlines today, but I suspect they're doing quite well.

And I suspect they're going to continue to do are And they cannot fuel that business without ongoing investments in their network. So if the sort of the Rest of the question here is, is there demand that's happening within the cloud provider space that's trying to get ahead of some of the supply constraints in the industry? I believe that, yes, there's probably some of that that's happening right now, but I don't believe that's the only thing that's happening. I think, we've executed well. We've preserved in the cloud to be more on the high end of our long term model.

Speaker 3

Yes. And just as a reminder, we saw bookings growth in the cloud vertical nearly 30%. Revenue was at a 3% clip. So clearly, we're building some backlog in this with the cloud vertical as well. We expect revenue to be up

Speaker 1

a little bit earlier, but can you talk about any inflationary pressures you're seeing in component pricing?

Speaker 3

Yes. So at this point, it is really difficult to We're obviously working with our suppliers. We have long term contracts in many cases, long term pricing contracts, etcetera. So we're not expecting it to be, I would say, super material. However, we are expecting there to be some impact and we are factoring that into our long term loss at this point.

But it is early. It's something we're adapting on a regular basis. We do think it could have some impact. It probably will have some impact. We don't think it's going to be enough to take us off our full year

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Tim Wong with Barclays. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 6

Thank you. Two questions, if I could. Rami, maybe you can update us. I think Ken mentioned something about the strength in the cloud vertical and still looking for And maybe if you could just work in kind of what you're seeing across that customer base and the rest of the customer base as far as white boxing as a risk? And then Secondly, on the service provider side, could you talk a little bit about the competitive landscape?

Obviously, Huawei participants have some struggles and Nokia seems to be struggling a little bit as well across their businesses. So can you talk about in the context of a Favorable industry backdrop, how you see kind of competitive advantages at this point? Thank you.

Speaker 2

Sure, Tim. So let's start with the cloud provider space, in particular, 400 gig. Things are progressing very well on 400 gig. I feel increasingly confident that we're going to be able to win 400 gig footprint. And this is a broad remark Now that the competitive solutions are out in the market, the competitive bake offs are happening, we sort of get a good feel of What's out there and how the differentiation we had hoped to achieve is actually faring out with practical testing and I feel good.

I mean, let's just say that We're winning, especially in wide area use cases, and this is across both the hyperscale as well as the Our solutions, our strategy is very much based on the strength and the merits of our own products, I think we were delivering solutions and have delivered solutions that addresses their biggest needs and requirements. The Huawei Sort of issue that's out there and whether that presents an opportunity for us. The answer is yes. I think we do see some opportunities right now as a result of some concerns About Huawei, they're going to sort of play out in time. This is never going to be a sort of an overnight thing.

Share shift typically happens in timeframes of the year. But the good news is we do see that there are opportunities and customers that are rethinking some of the decisions

Speaker 0

comes from the line of Meta Marshall with Morgan Stanley. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 7

Great. Thanks. I just wanted to ask About the security kind of segment that you alluded to, I mean just in I guess, how far integrated or how far down the pipeline are you in integrating 128 into kind of the portfolio so that it can be kind of Across sell, across Mist and the enterprise portfolio. And then just would the security portfolio have grown year over year without the inclusion of 128? Thanks.

Speaker 2

Yes. So let me start and then Ken, you can ask some more colors on the specific question. So 128 has become an integral part of our AI driven enterprise strategy, which is really around everything from client to seamlessly with our on prem security offering. And then over time, as we introduce more cloud based security offerings, it will integrate seamlessly with that. And so that has been it's still early days with 128 technology.

But as I mentioned, the win rate is solid. The customer interest is solid. The pipeline that's being built is solid. And I have a lot of confident that it's going to be a successful acquisition in the long term.

Speaker 3

Yes, security all up, which includes product and services, grew 11% in the quarter. Products actually grew better more than services. Services had modest growth. Products actually was driving most of that 11% growth. And yes, it would have grown without 128T, in fact, all three of the recent acquisitions, Apstra 128T as well as NetRound accounted for less than 10% of revenue in the quarter.

Are on track to the full year plan. We expect them to be about a point in aggregate of growth for Juniper, so call it $45,000,000 or so in total revenue for the year. So we're on track for that, about Q1 was less than $10,000,000 as expected.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of George Noter with Jefferies. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 4

Hi, guys. Thanks very much. I realize this is probably a relatively small part of Stimulus dollars coming into that space, certainly there I think in terms of the WAN piece and the routing piece, can you just talk about what percentage of sales might be coming from that end market and how you might see that growing going forward? Thanks.

Speaker 2

Yes. I don't even know if we had that figure off the top of our head. Maybe Ken can pull something up. But I'll tell you this, we've actually had over the last 2 years or so as Part of the sales restructuring that we did, a deliberate focus on Tier 2, Tier 3 service providers with an eye on tapping into some of the broadband sort of rural stimulus dollars that are coming that are making their way into the market. So there's no doubt that Biden's infrastructure deal, if it actually manages to pass, is going to present some opportunities for And I think we're well prepared for it.

It really is it's not a matter of technology. We've got the goods, we've got the product, We have the solutions, automation in fact becomes especially important for the rural areas, where typically you're going to start to deal with a matter of sort of seeing the stimulus dollars actually weave their way into actual spending.

Speaker 3

Yes. Unfortunately, we do not break out our business, Our automated WAN solutions business in that way, so we can't share with you the numbers. But as Rami mentioned, we're focused on diversifying that business and we've seen tremendous success over the last couple of years diversifying and I think we'll continue to do that going forward.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Sami Badri with Credit Suisse. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 4

Hi. Thank you for giving me the small facet question. One thing, Ken, I think in your prepared remarks, you talked about The cloud growth and the new guide, I may have misheard you, but you said that the way it's trending, it's coming in at the higher end Service provider flat to slightly up, kind of I think that was the messaging you used. Can you just kind of give us the same kind of dynamic or unpack it for cloud so we can just get a better idea what that factor looks like as it pertains to the company?

Speaker 3

Yes, absolutely. So at Investor Day, we talked about cloud, The long term model for cloud being plus 1% to 5%, so 1% to 5% growth on a kind of a 3 year CAGR basis or a long term model basis. This year, we actually expect to be at the high end of that range. So we're thinking closer to the 4% to 5% range, the higher end of that 1% to 5 Based on the strength we're seeing at the start of the year, previously for cloud, our previous guidance for the year was just it would be growth, Right. And now we're actually quantifying it to the high end of that kind of 1% to 5% range.

That's a change from 90 days ago.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of David Voigt with UBS. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 4

Great. Thanks, participants. And if you guys covered this, I apologize. My line went off for a little bit. Can you Ken or Ronny, can you kind of touch on the contribution from the acquisitions In the Q1 and where did that show up?

I'm assuming most of it showed up in the Enterprise segment. It sounds like it was somewhere between $5,000,000,000 and ten And then just as a quick follow-up, I'll just lay them out there both. When I think about sort of the commentary for the full year guidance, Does it imply based on your cloud and service provider commentary that sort of the back half of the year enterprise revenue growth should be sort of double digits? Is that Sort of what you're intimating by sort of the guidance that you've laid out there? Thanks.

Speaker 3

Yes. So on the acquisition participants For Q1, the revenue was less than $10,000,000 in aggregate, in line with our expectations for the quarter. So we're off to a strong start, But Q1 was less than $10,000,000 so relatively immaterial. Most of that would have showed up in enterprise given the customers sorry, the products predominantly being Cloud Ready Data Center and AI Driven Enterprise oriented revenue products. We're still on track for the full year to get to a 1% In aggregate growth, so call it $45,000,000 give or take for the year from revenue perspective.

And we do think these acquisitions, as in the second half and actually be accretive here in 2022. So while they're a bit of a drag on overall earnings this year, we expect them to enable us to expand margins participants in 2022 and beyond. Second part of your question, I'm sorry, one was about the acquisitions. What was the second part of your question?

Speaker 4

When I think about the rest of the guidance, does that imply sort of enterprise revenue growth of sort of double digits in the back half of this year given sort of where cloud will be in

Speaker 2

service provider for the rest

Speaker 3

Yes. I mean, so enterprise, we expect to be our fastest growing vertical. I think if you do the math, you're going to get to kind of the numbers you're talking about. We expect it to be our fastest growing vertical. We do believe AI driven enterprise will be double digit growth.

Cloud ready data center, we talked about being Towards the middle of the long term model, which is kind of high single digit growth, and those are predominantly enterprise, although we obviously sell those solutions to

Speaker 4

Operator, we'll take 2 more questions.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line of Alex Henderson with Needham, you may proceed with your question.

Speaker 4

Thank you very much. So when you guys started talking about this, participants. We spent a fair amount of time talking about how it generates upsell into other products and pulls through A multiple of the initial sales over time. I haven't really heard much update on that. In fact, if anything, the last quarter seemed like it had been at the lower end of But to what extent is there an upsell around what has traditionally been more standardized product like rackables, switches and so forth.

Speaker 2

Yes, let me start and then maybe Ken, you can ask some more color. I honestly, I'm scratching my head a little bit about where your comments around sort of slowdown because we don't see anything of that nature in this in the AI driven enterprise where it misplays. I did mention in my prepared remarks that if you take a look at orders for Mist all up that includes all Mist products, right, the wireless, wired Switching and associated software capabilities, it doubled on a year over year basis. And It's no longer a small business for Juniper. I mean, really it's now starting to contribute meaningfully.

The innovation phenomenal here. I mean, the pace of innovation we just announced and launched in fact and will ship very shortly, we haven't already a new breed of campus wired switch in the form of the EX4400, which is our first true cloud native, mist optimized wired switch that's intended for rapid fast adoption, Zero touch provisioning, all the aspects of the Mist solution that you've come to expect and love and their access points now applying to this next generation wired solution. And that's just us really pouring fuel on the fire of The AI driven business that's essentially powered entirely by Mist today.

Speaker 3

Yes, I would just add that we mentioned in the prepared remarks Our ES pull through related to Mist was actually a record in Q1. So the amount of ES that we're selling because of the Mist kind of solution is actually at an all time high. And we're obviously continuing to sell more subscriptions as well. And the subscriptions, they don't show up in revenue either way. Obviously, they're recognized radically over time.

So a big part of our ARR growth that we mentioned of 28% is also very much tied to the full Mist solution, not just necessarily the WiFi. So In aggregate, we talked about at Investor Day that we think the lifetime value of the kind of the pull through, if you will, the non wireless LAN solution is about 2.5 times the WiFi business. So that's something that we're still in the very early innings of that. We're still leading largely with Mist itself and in pulling through the rest of the solution. But as we see the lifetime value and these customers continue to grow with EX and other parts of the portfolio, We feel confident in that kind of 2.5 times ratio that we put out there.

Speaker 0

Our next question comes from the line Paul Silverstein with Cowen. You may proceed with your question.

Speaker 3

Thanks, guys. I appreciate you squeezing me in. A question pertaining to question for Rami or both of you. On Cowen gross margin, You did sound more constructive looking out beyond this year. Any change you're thinking about where gross margin can go and in what timeframe?

So you're right, we have not changed our guidance for gross margin. We did change our guidance for revenue. We increased it by a point And we're not bringing gross margin up. And typically, you would expect with volume, you would see some increase in gross margin. And some of the reason for that, Paul, is some of these Supply constraints, some of the semiconductor shortages, we're factoring in some incremental costs.

And quite honestly, there's still some uncertainty there. So I just want At this point, we're keeping our margin targets the same. Beyond this year, I think on things we control like software mix and optimization within our services organization, etcetera, I feel very good. That said, some of the things that I have less control on, whether it be COVID related freight costs or even some of these Semiconductor shortages, it makes it very cloudy. So at this point, we have real no update beyond this year.

We expect to be able to manage to the 60% target for this year, but beyond Really no change to our outlook at this point.

Speaker 2

And Paul, did

Speaker 0

you have that?

Speaker 2

I think Paul said he had a question for me, but maybe we lost him already.

Speaker 0

Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of today's question and answer session. I would like to turn this call back over for closing remarks.