The company reported group sales increased nine percent compared with the same period last year, to 3.2 billion euros (USD 3.5 billion).
"I am particularly pleased by Nokia Networks, which rebounded dramatically from its tough start to the year," Nokia's chief executive Rajeev Suri said in a media conference call.
The group's second quarter attributable net profit was down to 347 million euros, compared with 2.5 billion euros last year, the drop resulting from discontinued operations. Nokia's Devices and Services unit -- the unprofitable handset business -- whose sale to Microsoft in 2013 was finalised in April 2014, contributed to net profit in the second quarter 2014.
"The result was very solid, far above my expectations. Particularly positive was that the profit margins of the network business recovered back to good levels after a weak first quarter," analyst Mikael Rautanen of Finnish equity research firm Inderes told AFP.
Shares of Nokia surged 6.19 percent in late afternoon trading on the Helsinki market.
Despite recent media speculation of German carmakers seeking to acquire Nokia's HERE unit for its mapping and location system activities, the company did not reveal any details of ongoing negotiations.
Rautanen estimates that while HERE's share of Nokia's profits is relatively small, the sale would have a positive impact on Nokia's balance sheet.
"It would boost the company's financial muscles so to speak," he said.
In mid-April Nokia struck a 15.6 billion euro deal to buy its rival Alcatel-Lucent to create the world's biggest supplier of mobile phone network equipment.
Suri said today Nokia expects to finalise the deal in the first half of 2016.
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