Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Nokia says is gaining market share, sees 2023 growth By Reuters
{Current column}471People have watched
IntroductionBy Anne Kauranen and Supantha MukherjeeHELSINKI/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Nokia (NYSE:) on Thursday beat ...
By Anne Kauranen and Which securities can be traded in foreign exchangeSupantha Mukherjee
HELSINKI/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Nokia (NYSE:) on Thursday beat quarterly operating profit expectations and forecast higher 2023 sales as the Finnish telecom equipment maker said it had been able to gain market share, benefitting from 5G roll-out in countries such as India.
"We are taking market share now," Chief Executive Pekka Lundmark told Reuters, adding the growth was broad-based and calling India "the highlight of this story".
Nokia shares opened up 5.8% in Helsinki.
Lundmark said Nokia saw another year of growth ahead in 2023, in sharp contrast with its main rival Ericsson (BS:).
Ericsson had reported lower than expected fourth-quarter core earnings and said it expected a fall in margin in its Networks business to persist through the first half of 2023, citing weak sales of 5G equipment in markets such as the United States.
"I guess the reason is that we have a more optimistic view on the size of the Indian market," Lundmark said, when asked about Nokia's better outlook than its rival's.
He added Nokia had also managed to diversify its customer base from network service providers to industrial customers who set up their own private 5G networks at power plants, utilities and mines among others.
"We estimate that the world economy is only 30% digitalized compared to what the full potential is and that is exactly what we are seeing in the enterprise business," Lundmark said.
Nokia's fourth-quarter comparable operating profit rose to 1.15 billion euros ($1.26 billion) from 908 million last year, beating the 924.6 million euro mean forecast of 10 analysts polled by Refinitiv.
"Looking forward to 2023, while we are mindful of the uncertain economic outlook, demand remains robust," Lundmark said in a statement.
Nokia forecast full-year net sales of between 24.9 billion euros and 26.5 billion euros, which implies between 2% and 8% growth in constant currency. Analysts expect 25.5 billion euros.
Net sales grew 16% to 7.45 billion euros, beating estimates of 7.11 billion euros.
Apart from growing demand from business customers, the company also got big contracts from Indian telecom operators for the launch of 5G in that country.
Lundmark said the constraints on chip supplies had eased.
GRAPHIC - Nokia outperfoms
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/mopakjgrlpa/nokia.PNG
($1 = 0.9160 euros)
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
OpenAI CEO considers opening office as Japan govt eyes adoption By Reuters
{Current column}By Kantaro Komiya and Satoshi SugiyamaTOKYO (Reuters) -OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman said on Mon ...
Read moreBDVE Trading Is Safe? Company Abbreviation BDVE
{Current column}FTI's top 100 foreign exchange brokers can be selected by reference. If they are not within 100, ...
Read moreJohnson's Ability To Lead Tories Into Victory At Risk With Today's By
{Current column}Asia Pacific equities were mixed. Gains were recorded in China, Hong Kong, Australia, and India, amo ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Musk tells Tesla staff he must approve all hiring
- Monitoring U.S. Fed Policy Expectations With The 2
- Is Wafra Investment Trading Safe?Wafra Investment Company Profile
- Musk says Tesla's new car factories 'losing billions of dollars' By Reuters
- Credit Suisse bond wipe
- Weekly Inflation Outlook: If You Can’t Say Something Nice, Don’t Say Anything
Latest articles
-
Asia FX dips as China inflation disappoints, dollar flat on mixed CPI By
-
The Fed’s Tightening Is Creating Illiquidity Pockets And Greater Fragility
-
Wall Street bounces as growth, energy stocks jump By Reuters
-
Gold Capped By Moving Averages
-
U.S. PCE price index cools in March; Consumer spending remains flat By
-
Oil rises in volatile trading amid supply uncertainty By Reuters