IntoMobile

Breaking news, information, and analysis on the latest mobile phones and mobile technology

Open NavigationOpen Search
  • Home
  • Platforms
    • iOS / iPhone OS
    • Android
    • Windows Phone
    • BlackBerry OS
  • Hardware
    • New Hardware
    • Tablets
    • Reviews
    • Rumors
  • Carriers
    • AT&T
    • Sprint
    • T-Mobile
    • Verizon
  • Manufacturers
    • Apple
    • Samsung
    • HTC
    • LG
    • Motorola
  • Best VPNs
  • Best AI Tools

Nokia shamed by Sony Ericsson in battle for margins

November 24, 2006 by Stefan Constantinescu - Leave a Comment

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook ( 0 shares )

Nokia’s CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said the strong growth in entry level phones coupled with a lower percentage of sales in higher-end products impacted Nokia’s margins. Taking a longer term view, this should be setting the Finnish giant up for strong market share in key markets like India, where rapid economic growth in many regions should lead in the five-year time span to strong upgrade demand for more expensive phones. But the short-term impact on margins in Nokia’s largest business unit, Mobile Phones, worried shareholders, even while it was balanced somewhat by strong performance in Nokia’s two advanced device divisions which are the focus of many of the company’s growth plans – the Multimedia unit, which sells advanced media devices, saw sales rise 45% year-on-year to €2.09bn; while Enterprise Solutions sales advanced 27% to €257m. Sales at the Mobile Phones unit rose 14% to €5.95bn.

This shows that Nokia is weakest in the mid-range sector, a fact that Kallasvuo acknowledged in an analyst call. "The product portfolio needs continued improvements. We’re making those improvements," he said.

One of Nokia’s key aims in the coming quarters is to wrest back the US number one spot from Motorola, and it will have taken some hope from a patchy performance from its main rival. Motorola reported a 45% decline in profit amid disappointing handset sales, which fell 1.3 million units short of its goal of shipping 55 million units in the quarter, and will need to act quickly to see off an expected major challenge in Q4 from Nokia’s revamped line-up, especially its N Series of music and media phones.

Source: Arc Chart

Here’s hoping that Nokia doesn’t turn into the Dell of mobile phones. You want to know why Nokia isn’t number 1 in America? Huge lack of advertising. I see a RAZR and Motorola Q commercial every single day. I honestly don’t even remember seeing a Nokia commercial on television, but then again I don’t watch that much, and when I do people usually snip the commercials out.

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook ( 0 shares )

Back to top ▴

Back to top ▴

Follow IntoMobile

38k
36k
4k
13k
12k

Most Recent Posts

  • OnePlus Nord Buds 4 teased with dual drivers and LHDC 5.0 support for $30
  • Galaxy Z Fold 7 receives two new Galaxy AI features in surprise update
  • Vivo X Fold6 gets world’s first MediaTek Dimensity 9500 Super Edition chip
  • Nothing Ear (3a) leak reveals €99 price tag and four color options for France
  • Motorola launches Moto G Max with 200 MP camera and IP69 protection

Get Updates Via E-Mail

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

About IntoMobile

  • About IntoMobile
  • Contact IntoMobile
  • Send us News Tips
  • Privacy Policy

Social Links

  • IntoMobile on Facebook
  • IntoMobile on Twitter
  • IntoMobile on Google+
  • IntoMobile on YouTube

Copyright © 2006-2021 IntoMobile. All rights reserved.