Company Description
Juniper Networks, historically traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol JNPR, operated in the manufacturing sector, with an industry classification in telephone apparatus and networking-related equipment. According to company and news disclosures, Juniper Networks described itself as a leader in secure, AI-native networking and as a company that is leading the convergence of AI and networking. Its AI-native networking platform, including the Mist platform, was built to run AI workloads and simplify IT operations while aiming to assure secure user and application experiences from the network edge to the data center and the cloud.
Public communications from Juniper Networks state that the company focused on an AI-native networking platform designed from the ground up to leverage artificial intelligence and machine learning. This platform was described as delivering highly secure and sustainable user experiences across wired, wireless and wide area network (WAN) environments. The company emphasized that, in its view, connectivity alone was not sufficient, and that the quality of the connection and user experience across edge, data center and cloud environments was central to its value proposition.
Juniper’s Mist AI-native networking platform and the Marvis AI engine were repeatedly highlighted in news releases as core to its strategy. The company reported that Mist was purpose-built to run AI workloads and simplify IT operations, and that it applied AI to automate key network operations tasks and proactively identify and resolve networking issues before they affected end users. Juniper also described its approach as extending AI-native capabilities across wired, wireless and WAN solutions, with the goal of providing what it called self-driving network operations and client-to-cloud visibility.
In multiple announcements, Juniper Networks characterized itself as a leader in secure, AI-native networks and noted that it was recognized by Gartner in Magic Quadrant reports for enterprise wired and wireless LAN infrastructure and for data center switching. The company stated that Gartner had named it a Leader in the Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Wired and Wireless LAN Infrastructure over multiple consecutive years, and that Gartner had positioned it highly for both "Completeness of Vision" and "Ability to Execute" in that market segment. These recognitions were presented by Juniper as validation of its AI-native networking strategy.
Juniper also communicated that its AI-native networking platform supported a variety of use cases across enterprises, service providers, cloud environments and public sector organizations. For example, the company highlighted deployments with large retailers, managed service providers, telecommunications operators and federal agencies. In a federal context, Juniper announced that its Juniper Mist Government Cloud had achieved FedRAMP Moderate Authorization, indicating that, according to the company, the platform met U.S. federal government cloud security requirements for that authorization level.
In addition, Juniper Networks described collaborations with technology partners. It announced an extended partnership with ServiceNow that integrated the Mist AI-native networking platform with ServiceNow telecom-focused service management and related applications, with the stated goal of providing end-to-end network and service automation. Juniper also announced a collaboration with Google Cloud under which customers could subscribe to Google’s Cloud WAN solution together with Juniper Mist wired, wireless, network access control, firewall and secure SD-WAN offerings via Google Cloud Marketplace. These collaborations were presented as ways to support enterprise campus and branch transformation and to optimize user experiences for applications and AI workloads.
From a capital markets and corporate structure perspective, Juniper Networks was a publicly traded company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker JNPR until mid-2025. An agreement and plan of merger dated January 9, 2024, among Juniper Networks, Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company (HPE) and a wholly owned HPE subsidiary (Jasmine Acquisition Sub, Inc.) provided for the acquisition of Juniper by HPE in an all-cash transaction. Subsequent filings and news releases report that this transaction closed on July 2, 2025, with Juniper Networks becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of HPE.
Following the closing of the merger, Juniper Networks filed a Form 8-K describing the completion of the transaction. That filing explains that each share of Juniper common stock outstanding immediately prior to the effective time of the merger was converted into the right to receive cash consideration, and that, as a result, Juniper common stock would cease to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange. A Form 25 filed by the New York Stock Exchange on July 2, 2025, provides notice of the removal of Juniper’s common stock from listing and registration under Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. A subsequent Form 15 filing dated July 14, 2025, certifies the termination of registration under Section 12(g) and suspension of certain reporting obligations, indicating that Juniper Networks, Inc. no longer had public reporting duties for its common stock.
For investors and researchers, the historical JNPR listing now represents the record of a former independent networking and AI-native networking platform company that has been integrated into Hewlett Packard Enterprise. The company’s historical disclosures, news releases and SEC filings provide context on its AI-native networking strategy, its positioning in wired and wireless LAN and data center switching markets, and its transition from a standalone public issuer to a wholly owned subsidiary of HPE.
Business focus and AI-native networking
Across its public communications, Juniper Networks consistently emphasized its focus on secure, AI-native networking. The company described its AI-native networking platform as being built from the ground up to leverage AI to deliver highly secure and sustainable user experiences. It highlighted capabilities such as AI-driven operations (often referred to as AIOps), digital experience twinning through features like Marvis Minis, and self-driving network operations via the Marvis AI Assistant and related dashboards.
Juniper’s messaging stated that its platform applied AI and machine learning to automate key network operations tasks, proactively identify and resolve wired, wireless, network access and WAN issues, and provide end-to-end visibility from client devices to cloud-hosted applications. These capabilities were presented as addressing the complexity of distributed networks and the demands of applications and AI workloads across edge, data center and cloud environments.
Corporate transformation and delisting
As documented in SEC filings, Juniper Networks underwent a significant corporate transformation through its acquisition by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. The Form 8-K filed on July 2, 2025, details the completion of the merger, the conversion of Juniper shares into cash consideration and the resulting change in control, with Juniper becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of HPE. The same filing notes that Juniper requested suspension of trading and delisting of its common stock from the New York Stock Exchange.
The subsequent Form 25 filed by the NYSE confirms the removal of Juniper’s common stock from listing and registration, and the Form 15 filed by Juniper Networks certifies the termination of registration and suspension of reporting obligations under the Exchange Act. Together, these filings indicate that JNPR no longer trades as a listed equity on the NYSE and that Juniper Networks, Inc. no longer files periodic reports as an independent public company.