Site icon Teleco Alert

Nokia reported a third-quarter net loss as sales at the handsets unit

ISLAMABAD (MEDIA)

Nokia reported Tuesday a third-quarter net loss as sales at the handsets unit it is selling to Microsoft continued to plunge.

However, the network business, which will constitute the bulk of operations going forward, did well, causing shares in the company to rise. USA TODAY reported.

The third-quarter net loss of 91 million euros ($125 million) compared with a net loss of 969 million euros a year earlier. Revenue fell more than 20% to 5.6 billion euros.

The struggling company said it sold 8.8 million Lumia smartphones, a 40 percent increase from 3 million a year earlier and slightly more than markets had expected.

But that was not enough to keep Nokia Corp. from giving a negative outlook for the devices and services unit it has agreed to sell to Microsoft Corp. for $7.2 billion.

Net sales at the devices and services unit fell by another 19 percent in the quarter, to 2.9 billion euros. It sold 64.6 million mobile devices in the period, down from 83 million a year earlier.

Although smartphone sales were up near 9 million, they lagged well behind chief competitors Apple with quarterly sales of 33.8 million and China’s Huawei’s at 13 million. The world’s No.1 mobile phone maker, Samsung Electronics sold more than 88 million smartphones in the third quarter.

Without the loss-making handset unit, the Finnish phone maker can look forward to better earnings from its more profitable networks business.

Nokia, which bought the other half of its joint networks venture from Siemens, expects a positive operating margin of some 12 percent in the unit, known as Nokia Solutions and Networks, with “solid net sales growth on a sequential basis.”

The company’s share price jumped more than 5% to 5.28 euros in early afternoon trading in Helsinki.

Nokia board chairman and interim CEO Risto Siilasmaa described the third quarter as “the most transformative” in the company’s history.

He was upbeat on the purchase of NSN and the sale of the handset unit to Microsoft, saying they would “significantly improve the earnings profile.”

The company repeated its target to save 3 billion euros in operating costs by the end of 2013.

Exit mobile version