Nokia sees cellphone sales shrinking faster
By Tarmo Virk and Sinead Carew
HELSINKI/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sales of mobile phones are shrinking faster than expected as consumers are cutting spending, the world's top cellphone maker Nokia said on Thursday in its second warning in three weeks.
"Consumers are continuing dramatically to cut back their spending," Nokia Chief Financial Officer Rick Simonson said at the company's investor day in New York, adding that he was under "no illusions" that the market would recover any time soon. "We're facing it across the world. What's recently accelerated is the slowdown in emerging markets," he said.
Nokia said handset market volumes are expected to fall by at least 5 percent next year, something many analysts were already expecting. But it sees its market share rising, helping to lift its stock 4 percent to 11.02 euros in Europe. Nokia's U.S. shares were up 54 cents or 4 percent at $13.84 on the New York Stock Exchange in afternoon trading.
Some analysts are worried, however, that handset sales could fall a lot further next year, as even Nokia acknowledged that it does not have very good visibility of the market for 2009.
"We're surprised they didn't cut (its forecast) more for 2009," said Charter Equity Research analyst Ed Snyder. "I don't think we'll see February 1 without another cut."
Nokia said it does not plan to give any more financial updates or estimates until it reports earnings in January.
It said that its key devices and services unit operating profit margin should be 13-19 percent next year, with the help of the cost-cutting to which it alluded throughout the analyst day.
"This would obviously be good news if met; investors have started to prepare for worse," said analyst Tero Kuittinen from Global Crown Capital. Continued...
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