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Nokia's market share troubles to hit profits

Reuters | January 19, 2011 | Tarmo Virki

(Reuters) – Nokia is expected to report its third profit fall in a row as the mobile phone company struggles to compete against high-end smartphones of Apple and Samsung, while also losing share at the cheaper end of the market.

Stephen Elop, who took over as Nokia’s chief executive last September, is expected to report a 24 percent drop in underlying earnings per share for the October-to-December quarter to 0.19 euros.

The phone market has recovered from a slump in 2009 when the global economic slowdown dampened demand for the latest gadgets. Demand this year has surged for new smartphones like iPhone 4 and Samsung’s Galaxy S.

Apple said late on Tuesday it sold 16.2 million iPhones in the December quarter, 86 percent more than a year ago and its highest ever quarterly sales, and said it saw strong demand continuing.

“Another stellar quarter for the iPhone is a clear sign of demand but Apple’s strength will undoubtedly have had repercussions for others struggling to gain traction in an extremely competitive and over supplied high-tier segment,” said CCS Insight analyst Geoff Blaber.

Nokia has lacked a hit smartphone since the N95, which was launched in 2006, before Apple entered the cellphone market.

“The N95 was a big hit. Ever since they have struggled,” said Canaccord analyst Michael Walkley. “The new CEO is getting challenged on both ends. They are very much pressured in the low end of the market.”

Nokia’s market share in India has halved in just few quarters. The company controls around 30 percent of this vast market, according to research firm Gartner, compared with around 60 percent market share in the previous year.

“We remain concerned about market share issues in the low-end due to local competition in emerging markets such as India and Middle East and Africa,” said UBS analysts in a note.

One of Nokia’s key rivals in the lower end of the market, China’s ZTE Corp, saw its phone sales rising 34 percent last year. In stark contrast, Nokia’s sales of basic cellphones slipped slightly in January-September last year from a year earlier.

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