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Nokia to cut up to 14,000 jobs after sales drop 20%

Nokia said it is targeting between €800m and €1.2 billion in cost savings by 2026
Nokia said it is targeting between €800m and €1.2 billion in cost savings by 2026

Finnish telecom gear group Nokia will cut up to 14,000 jobs to reduce costs, it said today, after weaker demand for next-generation 5G equipment lowered third-quarter sales by a fifth, adding it did not expect a market recovery soon.

The company's shares were down 5% in early trade.

As demand has slowed in countries such as the US, Nokia and rival Ericsson have tried to offset some of the weakness with higher sales to India, a low-margin market.

"The market situation is really challenging and it is witnessed by the fact that in our most important market, which is the North American market, our net sales are down 40% in Q3," chief executive Pekka Lundmark told Reuters in an interview.

Nokia is targeting savings of between €800m and €1.2 billion by 2026, its deadline to deliver a long-term comparable operating margin plan of at least 14%.

The company expects to reduce its employee base to between 72,000 and 77,000 employees, from 86,000, or about 16% job cuts at the high end.

Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark

Lundmark declined to give more details saying the company must consult first with employee representatives. However, he said he wanted to protect research and development.

Nokia has a small office in Dublin and its most recent filing, for 2020, shows that it employed 115 people there.

Nokia expects at least €400m of savings in 2024, and a further €300m in 2025.

Ericsson, which has also laid off thousands of employees this year, said the uncertainty affecting its business would persist into 2024.

Nokia, which echoed Ericsson's comments on uncertainty, however said there will be a more normal seasonal improvement in its network businesses in the fourth quarter.

The company did not cut its full-year outlook.

"We continue to believe in the mid-to-long-term market, but we are not going to sit and wait and pray that the market will recover anytime soon," Lundmark said. "We simply don't know when it will recover."

For market recovery, Lundmark said the industry needs to invest in faster mid-band equipment to help cope with the growth in data traffic. "Only 25% of 5G base stations in the world outside of China currently has mid-band," he said.

Mid-band equipment offers higher 5G speeds but many telecom operators started their 5G deployment with low-band gear that is cheaper but offers lower speeds.

Nokia said its quarterly comparable net sales fell to €4.98 billion from 46.24 billion last year, missing an estimate of €5.67 billion according to a LSEG poll.

Nokia will move to a leaner corporate centre to boost strategic focus while protecting spending on research and development, and giving more operational autonomy to business units, it said.

"There are signs here and there that demand would start to pick up again but it's too early to call it a broad-based trend," Lundmark said.