Nokia, Facing Android, iPhone Competition, Cuts Sales Forecast
Nokia, the world's top-selling handset manufacturer, has cut back
sales estimates for its mobile devices and services business for the
second-quarter of 2010, as well as the rest of the year.
Second-quarter sales, it said in a June 16 statement, are more likely
to be toward the lower end of, if not below, its previously expected
range of 6.7 billion Euro ($8.25 billion U.S.) to 7. 2 billion Euro
($8.86 billion U.S.).
Nokia blamed the decrease on "the competitive environment, particularly
at the high-end of the market, and shifts in product mix towards
somewhat lower gross margin products." Also factoring in, said the
statement, was "the recent depreciation of the Euro [which] affects
Nokia's cost of goods sold, operating expenses and global pricing
tactics."
The phone-maker's competitors at the high end of the market include, most notably, Apple and both its iPhone 3G S and soon-to-arrive iPhone 4, as well as Research In Motion's BlackBerry smartphones and the growing variety of devices running Google's Android OS.
Nokia's plans to retain its crown have included the introduction of the Symbian 3 OS, which will run on its newest flagship phone, the N8. With Intel, it also announced a new mobile OS called MeeGo. These introductions, however, may prove to have arrived too late.
To view images of the Nokia N8, click here.
"The interesting point here is that Nokia is lowering its outlook for
the full year as well, meaning they recognize that Symbian 3 likely
will not be enough to lift sales and that a turnaround probably won't
happen until Symbian 4 products hit the street in 2011," noted Ken
Hyers, a senior analyst with Technology Business Research (TBR).
"Nokia sees 2010 industry volumes increasing by 10 percent, but its own
volumes are expected to be flat [year-to-year], and its ASP will be
lower [year-to-year] as its own device sales shift away from high-end
smartphones," Hyers added. "This is not the direction Nokia wants to
see itself going, obviously, and it is likely to face intensified
competition in both the mid-tier from Samsung's Bada platform,
LG and lower-cost Android devices, while the low-end competition will
intensify as ZTE ups shipment volumes in 2010 and Samsung remains
strong in the high end of the low-cost market."
Struggling through recent quarters, Nokia - which also creates a wealth
of feature phones and lower-end devices for developing markets -
recognized the need to step up its smartphone offerings. During the
fourth quarter of 2009, research
firm iSuppli reported that Nokia, shipping 126.9 million handsets, saw
its best performance since the first half of 2008. And in the first quarter of 2010, analysts at Canalys noted that for the first time, touch screens were included in 50 percent of the smartphones Nokia shipped - a smart move, but still not enough to stop the recent sales forecast cut.
For the full year, Nokia said it continues to expect mobile device
volumes to be up approximately 10 percent, compared to 2009, and
"continues to target its mobile device volume market share to be flat
in 2010, compared to 2009."
TBR's Hyers added, "I suspect that a leadership change may be in the
offing if Nokia cannot soon show signs of progress and accelerate the
revamp of its portfolio."
Nokia will report its second-quarter results, and full guidance for 2010, on July 22.
