Despite a rise in sales in all its operations for the third quarter in a row, Nokia CEO Rajeev Suri described the networks division's profits which fell 60 percent as "unsatisfactory," saying the company was hurt by increased competition and "strategic entry deals, particularly in China."
Investors were disappointed and Nokia's stock fell nearly 11 percent to close at 6.04 euros on the Helsinki Stock Exchange.
Despite the drop in networks profit, the Finnish company's overall revenue surged 20 percent in the period, to 3.2 billion euros from 2.6 billion euros a year earlier and it swung into profit from a net loss of 239 million euros a year earlier.
The former top mobile phone maker, which peaked in 2008 with a global market share of 40 percent, failed to meet the smartphone challenge of the iPhone, Samsung and cheaper competitors in Asia. But its fortunes changed when it sold the ailing cellphone unit to Microsoft last year and started showing growth in the three remaining operations networks, mapping services and technologies.
"We are moving fast on the necessary integration planning, and have already established a structure designed to minimize disruption to our ongoing business," he said.
Nokia says it expects savings of 900 million euros by 2019 when the two companies join, with 200 million euros reductions in interest expenses per year by 2017.
Suri added that he was optimistic about the rest of the year, especially on deals with new customers.
Neil Mawston of Strategy Analytics near London said Nokia might have bitten off more than it can chew with the 15 billion-euro acquisition.
"It's a big deal and not necessarily always easy to pull together," Mawston said. "Nokia is obviously quite an experienced company but it's been through the wringer during the past few years and needs a period of stabilization before going on acquisition sprees."
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