Arista Networks: A Data Center’s Quiet Predicament

Arista Networks (ANET +6.80%) exists, ostensibly, to facilitate the communication between machines. It provides, as one might, the conduits – the ultra-fast Ethernet switches – that allow large clusters of GPUs and custom accelerators to exchange data within the increasingly opaque structures we call AI data centers. The precise function, however, feels less like a service and more like a necessary, yet unacknowledged, condition of their continued operation.

One finds oneself compelled to consider the implications. The company, it seems, is positioned to benefit from a peculiar expansion.

Growth Catalysts, or the Inevitable Accumulation

Cloud entities – Microsoft and Meta Platforms, for instance – are allocating substantial funds, tens of billions, to augment their AI infrastructure. This is not a choice, precisely. It is a process, an unfolding of preordained events. According to the reports from BNP Paribas – reports that arrive with the regularity of bureaucratic notices – the total addressable data center networking market will reach approximately $120 billion by 2028. A sum so large it ceases to be comprehensible.

Arista, in this arrangement, is well-positioned. Customers are, with increasing frequency, adopting high-speed, open-source Ethernet in the back-end AI networks. This is presented as a preventative measure against “vendor lock-in,” a phrase that suggests a subtle, insidious form of captivity. The alternative, of course, is Nvidia’s proprietary InfiniBand. One wonders if the choice is truly one’s own.

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Arista’s 400G and 800G high-speed Ethernet switching platforms were, as of 2025, being deployed in next-generation AI cluster networks. The company anticipates a transition to 800G and even faster 1.6T platforms by 2026. This is not progress, but an escalation. Arista’s growth, therefore, is not a matter of opportunity, but a direct consequence of this continued, relentless spending. A curious dependency, one might observe.

The company also invests in enterprise and campus networking, a broadening of scope described as a strategy extending “from client to branch to campus to data and now cloud and AI centers.” A comprehensive network, encompassing all points, all connections. One feels a growing sense of enclosure.

Arista currently boasts a revenue growth exceeding 20%, gross margins surpassing 60%, and a substantial cash reserve. These figures, however, feel strangely detached from reality. They are merely numbers, existing on a ledger, signifying little in the grand scheme.

Analysts predict revenues will rise from an estimated $8.9 billion in fiscal 2025 to nearly $21 billion in fiscal 2030. Assuming a reversion to its five-year historical price-to-sales multiple of 15.4x by 2030 – a conservative estimate, given the circumstances – Arista’s market capitalization could reach approximately $323 billion. A sum so immense it loses all meaning. This represents an 84% increase over its current market cap, a seemingly significant gain, yet ultimately inconsequential.

In this environment, Arista appears, at first glance, to be a hidden gem. But perhaps it is merely another component, another necessary cog in a machine whose purpose remains obscure. A quiet predicament, indeed.

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2026-02-08 06:32