Nokia Expects 'Meaningful' Benefits From 5G SoC in ‘Due Course,' Says CEO
Nokia took a second-quarter revenue hit of about 300 million euros ($354 million) from COVID-19, but “most of that we expect will be shifted to future periods,” said CEO Rajeev Suri on a Friday investor call. Q2 sales in North America were down 4%, a “better result than the company as a whole,” which had an 11% revenue decline, he said. The U.S. “was unfortunately hit by supply issues resulting from COVID-19,” he said. “There is a considerable amount of activity in the market related to the now-completed merger of T-Mobile and Sprint, preparation for the release of additional mid-band spectrum, operators assessing their cloud strategies and more.” Nokia had better than expected results in its 4G LTE business, said Suri. Its 5G SoC “helps us in 4G LTE when we are bidding for these combined deals which have 4G and 5G,” he said. “We haven’t yet felt the impact in any meaningful way from the 5G SoC.” But that will come “in due course,” because there’s a “six-month lag between shipments and actually banking some of the benefits.” The stock closed 7.4% higher Friday at $4.78.