Company Reports

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Stock Analyst Note

Nokia's second-quarter revenue was very disappointing, as the rate of decline improved only slightly. Recovering industry trends were much more pronounced in peer Ericsson's second quarter. Although we believe Ericsson has a near-term edge in mobile networks, Nokia has a more diverse business that will also benefit from a recovery in telecom carrier spending. We expect Nokia's other segments to contribute to a significant improvement in financial performance after 2024. Combined with what we believe are smart recent capital allocation decisions with the Infinera acquisition and an accelerated share buyback, we believe shares remain undervalued. We are maintaining our EUR 5.50 fair value estimate.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it should still benefit from a continuing 5G upgrade cycle. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson's strength does not necessarily come at Nokia's expense.
Stock Analyst Note

The agreement to acquire optical network solutions provider Infinera should lead to a beneficial increase in Nokia’s optical solutions scale and offers the opportunity for material cost savings. Nokia has been piling up cash while seeing its stock flounder amid a lull in wireless and wireline network spending in most geographies over the past year and a half. We think this is a good use of capital, and we continue to believe the shares are undervalued, as we are maintaining our EUR 5.50 fair value estimate.
Stock Analyst Note

Nokia experienced another huge sales decline in its first quarter, which is unsurprising considering the generally depressed global market for communications equipment over the past year and robust spending on mobile equipment in India during the first half of last year. In a report that closely mirrored Ericsson’s earlier this week, Nokia did exhibit and articulate some positives, notably margin expansion, progress on a cost-efficiency program, and an expectation that sales are poised to turn up. We are maintaining our EUR 5.50 fair value estimate for the no-moat company.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it should still experience tailwinds over the next few years from the global 5G upgrade cycle. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson's strength does not necessarily come at Nokia's expense.
Stock Analyst Note

It did not take much for Nokia’s stock to pop, considering how bleak performance had been throughout 2023. Management was less dour than it had previously been and expects a sales pickup in the second half of 2024. With a large net cash position and a cheap stock, the firm also initiated a EUR 600 million buyback that it intends to complete within two years. We don’t expect stellar performance from Nokia, but we don’t believe 2023 was reflective of the firm’s normalized potential. With rival Ericsson sitting in the same boat and global fixed and mobile network investment still required as data usage grows rapidly, we expect significant improvement over the next few years despite our view that Nokia has no moat. We are maintaining our EUR 5.50 fair value estimate and think the stock remains undervalued.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it should still experience tailwinds over the next few years from the global 5G upgrade cycle. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson's strength does not necessarily come at Nokia's expense.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it should still experience tailwinds over the next few years from the global 5G upgrade cycle. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson's strength does not necessarily come at Nokia's expense.
Stock Analyst Note

Nokia and Ericsson stocks had sizable moves in opposite directions on Dec. 5 on the news that AT&T intends to deploy Ericsson’s open radio access network, or O-RAN, equipment throughout most of its - network by 2026. At the margins, the news is positive for Ericsson and negative for Nokia, but we think the market has overreacted to how consequential the contract is, and we don’t think this portends further deterioration at Nokia while Ericsson gains share. We are maintaining our EUR 5.50 fair value estimate for Nokia and SEK 95 fair value estimate for Ericsson.
Stock Analyst Note

Though they’re tough to find and instill little confidence, here are the positives we see following Nokia’s third-quarter results: the company did not further reduce its 2023 guidance after doing so last quarter, implying a big sales bounceback in the fourth quarter; management expects free cash flow to go positive in the fourth quarter after it has been depressed by working capital fluctuations the past three quarters; and the terrible operating results are not company-specific. Peer Ericsson’s business has also been under pressure, and other companies that rely on U.S. wireless carrier spending have seen slowdowns. Industrywide, we expect sales growth to return in 2024.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. The business is historically cyclical, but the world is currently in the early stages of the 5G upgrade cycle. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it is still seeing its business rise due to 5G. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson’s rise is not a zero-sum game in any event.
Stock Analyst Note

Nokia experienced the same headwinds as Ericsson in the second quarter, with the primary culprit being a big slowdown in North American carrier spending and the mix-shift away from the more profitable North American region, resulting in a reduction in margins. The weak results were well-telegraphed—management previously said customers were pulling back on spending, U.S. mobile carriers foreshadowed less network investment in 2023, and Nokia cut its full-year guidance last week. We are not changing our long-term forecast and don’t expect much annual revenue growth in the long term. We are maintaining our EUR 6 fair value estimate.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. The business is historically cyclical, but the world is currently in the early stages of the 5G upgrade cycle. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it is still seeing its business rise due to 5G. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson’s rise is not a zero-sum game in any event.
Stock Analyst Note

As expected, Ericsson’s second-quarter results were weak, with reduced wireless network spending in the U.S. causing a big dip in organic sales and pressuring margins, relative to last year. While the second-quarter performance was in-line to slightly better than what management had publicly anticipated, management wavered on the timing of a reacceleration, which it previously expected in the second half of 2023. None of this has any bearing on our long-term forecast. We expect mobile network spending to be cyclical, but for there to be very little average annual growth over the long term. We are maintaining our SEK 95 fair value estimate and believe the stock is undervalued.
Stock Analyst Note

Although it endured similar headwinds, Nokia’s first-quarter results were much better than rival Ericsson’s, all things considered. Nonetheless, Nokia’s stock sold off just as much in response to the first-quarter report. More than margin weakness or the fact that first-quarter sales benefitted from tailwinds that will not persist throughout the year, we attribute the selloff to management stating it sees signs of the economic environment impacting customer spending. Any near-term fluctuations in revenue growth will have little impact on our long-term view. Regardless of timing, we expect Nokia to benefit from 5G and future wireless upgrade cycles but believe its business will remain cyclical. We don’t project much long-term sales growth, on average, but we still think the stock is materially undervalued relative to our EUR 6 fair value estimate.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. The business is historically cyclical, but the world is currently in the early stages of the 5G upgrade cycle. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it is still seeing its business rise due to 5G. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson’s rise is not a zero-sum game in any event.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. The business is historically cyclical, but the world is currently in the early stages of the 5G upgrade cycle. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it is still seeing its business rise due to 5G. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson’s rise is not a zero-sum game in any event.
Stock Analyst Note

In concluding a solid 2022, Nokia’s excellent fourth quarter showed strength across all segments with sales and margins. While a moderation of currency tailwinds should make reported 2023 sales less eyepopping, underlying organic growth acceleration should continue. We are raising our fair value estimate to EUR 6.00 from EUR 5.60 and believe the stock is undervalued.
Company Report

Nokia’s biggest business supplies radio access network equipment and services to telecom carriers to build public wireless networks. The business is historically cyclical, but the world is currently in the early stages of the 5G upgrade cycle. Nokia has lost some market share to Ericsson in recent years, but it is still seeing its business rise due to 5G. It also benefits from the explicit or implicit exclusion of Huawei and ZTE equipment in many Western markets, as governments consider banning the Chinese vendors. In addition, carriers typically source from multiple vendors, so Ericsson’s rise is not a zero-sum game in any event.
Stock Analyst Note

While Nokia’s third quarter disappointed the market, its sales and margins were good across almost all segments. Unfortunately, the company seems no closer to resolving licensing disputes that have modestly weighed on revenue all year. And because Nokia Technologies, the firm’s intellectual property segment, has such high reported margins, the loss of that revenue has an outsize impact on total operating margins.

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