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Nokia profit beats views as smartphones advance

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Handset giant's market share boosted to 39% on demand for N97, N900 smartphones.

Nokia Corp., the world's largest handset maker, Thursday posted fourth quarter profits that beat expectations as it boosted its share of the lucrative smartphone segment, marking a strong comeback in the battle with iPhone-maker Apple Inc.

The Espoo, Finland-based company reported net profit of EUR948 million for the three months to Dec. 31, up from EUR576 million a year earlier and beating analysts' expectations for EUR620 million.

The hype surrounding the unveiling of Apple's iPad Internet tablet Wednesday couldn't take the shine off Nokia's market-busting performance, and at the close its shares ended up EUR0.89, or 9.9% at EUR9.91.

Click here to find out more!Nokia and Apple are locked in a battle for dominance in the lucractive smartphone segment and many expected Nokia to lose further market share in area it previously dominated. Nokia has also moved back into the computing segment with its netbook, a segment Apple's Chief Executive Steve Jobs Wednesday took aim at with the iPad.

But demand for Nokia's high-end devices, such as its N900 and N97 smartphones, led to an increase in handset market share to 39% in the fourth quarter from 37% a year earlier.

"We grew our market share in smartphones in the fourth quarter, driven by the successful launch of new touch and QWERTY models," said Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo.

Cost cutting also helped; Nokia trimmed costs throughout 2009 in response to tough market conditions and by the end of December had around 124,000 employees, down from 126,000 a year earlier.

Nokia Chief Financial Officer Timo Ihamuotila told Dow Jones Newswires the company aims to improve the usability of its devices and launch new services to further boost its smartphone market share, after it last week made its Ovi Maps navigation service subscription-free. Navigation has been a key battleground in the mobile application space.

Ihamuotila said Nokia is further exploring the border area between smartphones and computers and may introduce more netbooks following its newly-launched Booklet 3G. He said it is too early to tell how much of a threat Apple's iPad may pose.

Nokia's U.S. rival Motorola Inc. also Thursday reported strong smartphone sales led by its Droid, based on Google Inc.'s Android platform, which ...

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