Key Stats
Nokia Oyj is a global telecommunications, information technology, and consumer electronics company. It engages in the design and manufacture of mobile communications products and has operated through several business segments: Devices & Services, which includes Smart Devices (such as Lumia smartphones) and Mobile Phones (including Asha full-touch smartphones); HERE, which develops location-based products and services; and Nokia Siemens Networks (later Nokia Networks), a provider of telecommunications infrastructure with a focus on mobile broadband technology, professional services, managed services, and systems integration for operators worldwide.
Nokia was founded in 1865 and took its current corporate form in 1967. It is headquartered in Espoo, Finland. Nokia has a long history of successful change and innovation, adapting to shifts in markets and technologies. From humble beginnings with one paper mill, the company has participated in many sectors over time — cables, paper products, tires, rubber boots, consumer and industrial electronics, plastics, chemicals, telecommunications infrastructure, and more. Most recently, Nokia has been best known for its wireless communication technologies, which have connected billions of people through networks and mobile phones.
Following the sale of its Devices & Services business to Microsoft in 2014, Nokia refocused entirely on telecommunications networks infrastructure. Today it is one of the world’s three largest providers of mobile network equipment, alongside Ericsson and Huawei. Nokia is listed on the Nasdaq Helsinki and the New York Stock Exchange.
Nokia History
Nokia Founder
Nokia Business Segments
Nokia Acquisitions
Nokia’s acquisition history tracks the company’s successive reinventions as closely as any other measure. The early deals — Gate5 in 2006 and NAVTEQ in 2008 for $8.1 billion — were bets on digital mapping at a time when smartphones were just beginning to change how people navigated. That bet paid off commercially but was ultimately divested: the HERE mapping business was sold to a BMW-Daimler-Volkswagen consortium in 2015 for €2.8 billion, as Nokia chose to concentrate entirely on networks.
The Nokia Siemens Networks joint venture, formed in 2007 with Siemens contributing its telecom infrastructure assets, gave Nokia significant scale in the global carrier equipment market. In 2013 Nokia bought out Siemens’ 50% stake for €1.7 billion, gaining full ownership of what was then renamed Nokia Networks — a decisive move that came just months before announcing the sale of its phone business to Microsoft.
The Alcatel-Lucent acquisition, completed November 3, 2016, was the largest in Nokia’s history until Infinera. The €15.6 billion all-stock deal brought Bell Labs — one of the most storied industrial research organizations in the world, responsible for the transistor, the laser, the Unix operating system, and multiple foundational telecommunications technologies — under Nokia’s roof. It also added Alcatel-Lucent’s deep IP routing, optical, and fixed-access capabilities, which filled gaps in Nokia’s portfolio and made it a genuine end-to-end competitor to Ericsson and Huawei. The integration was difficult; Nokia later acknowledged that 5G execution stumbles in the early 2020s were partly rooted in the complexity of merging Alcatel-Lucent’s mobile radio assets.
Alongside Alcatel-Lucent in 2016, Nokia acquired Withings, a French connected health device maker, for $191 million. The health unit was integrated into Nokia Technologies and then sold back to Withings co-founder Éric Carreel in 2018 after Nokia wrote off the acquisition cost. The Infinera deal, announced June 2024 and closed February 28, 2025, for $2.3 billion, adds optical networking technology specifically suited to data center connectivity — a segment Nokia views as one of the fastest-growing opportunities in its market, driven by AI infrastructure investment. Simultaneously, Nokia sold its Alcatel Submarine Networks business to the French government for €350 million, focusing the Network Infrastructure group on its higher-growth optical, IP, and fixed-access lines.
Nokia Revenue
Nokia Market Cap
Nokia Competitors
In telecom network infrastructure — Nokia’s primary business since 2014 — the competitive set is defined by Ericsson and Huawei above all others. The three companies together hold roughly 70% of global core network revenue and dominate RAN markets. ZTE holds meaningful share in Asia. Cisco Systems competes on IP routing, switching, and core network software — segments where Nokia has also grown its presence through Alcatel-Lucent’s intellectual property and its own cloud-native network portfolio. The Infinera acquisition brings Nokia into more direct competition with Ciena and Huawei in the optical transport and data center interconnect segments.
| Company | Headquarters | Primary Segment | Revenue (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ericsson | Stockholm, Sweden | RAN, 5G core, managed services | ~SEK 263B / ~$24B (2024) |
| Huawei Technologies | Shenzhen, China | Full telecom portfolio, consumer devices | ~$118B (2024) |
| Cisco Systems | San Jose, CA, USA | Networking, security, collaboration | ~$56.7B (FY2025) |
| ZTE Corporation | Shenzhen, China | RAN, fixed, terminals | ~CNY 124B / ~$17B (2024) |
| Samsung Networks | Suwon, South Korea | 5G RAN, private networks, core | ~$5B (Networks est., 2024) |
| Ciena Corporation | Hanover, MD, USA | Optical networking, WaveServer | ~$4.0B (FY2024) |
| Juniper Networks | Sunnyvale, CA, USA | Routing, switching, security | ~$5.5B (2024) |
| Motorola Solutions | Chicago, IL, USA | Private LTE/5G, public safety networks | ~$10.8B (2024) |
| NEC Corporation | Tokyo, Japan | Open RAN, 5G core, enterprise networks | ~¥3.5T / ~$22B (FY2024) |
| HPE (Hewlett Packard Enterprise) | Houston, TX, USA | Telecom cloud infrastructure, Aruba wireless | ~$31.8B (FY2024) |
FAQs
When was Nokia founded?
Nokia’s origins go back to 1865, when mining engineer Fredrik Idestam established a wood pulp mill at the Tammerkoski Rapids in southwestern Finland and later named the business Nokia Ab after the nearby Nokianvirta river. The modern Nokia Corporation was formed in 1967 through the merger of Nokia Ab, Finnish Rubber Works (founded 1898), and Finnish Cable Works (founded 1912). The 1967 date is when the company took its current corporate form, but the company traces its history to 1865.
Why did Nokia sell its phone business?
Nokia’s mobile phone division lost ground rapidly after the arrival of Apple’s iPhone in 2007 and the subsequent rise of Android. Despite the 2011 partnership with Microsoft and the Lumia Windows Phone lineup, Nokia failed to regain meaningful smartphone market share. In September 2013, Nokia announced the sale of its Devices & Services business to Microsoft for approximately €5.44 billion. The transaction closed April 25, 2014. Nokia subsequently refocused on Nokia Networks, HERE mapping, and Nokia Technologies, completing its transformation into a telecommunications infrastructure company.
What was the Alcatel-Lucent acquisition?
In April 2015, Nokia announced an all-stock agreement to acquire Alcatel-Lucent, the Franco-American telecommunications equipment company, for €15.6 billion. The deal closed November 3, 2016. It brought Bell Labs, Alcatel-Lucent’s research arm, into Nokia, along with deep capabilities in IP routing, optical networking, fixed access, and analytics. The acquisition made Nokia one of only three global vendors — alongside Ericsson and Huawei — with a true end-to-end portfolio across mobile, fixed, and transport networks.
What does Nokia sell today?
Nokia operates through four business groups: Mobile Networks (radio access equipment for 4G and 5G), Network Infrastructure (optical networking, IP routing, fixed access — expanded by the 2025 Infinera acquisition), Cloud and Network Services (5G core software, private wireless, managed services), and Nokia Technologies (patent licensing and intellectual property management). Nokia’s patent portfolio of approximately 20,000 families includes over 7,000 patents recognized as essential to 5G standards, making the Technologies division a significant profit contributor independent of equipment sales.
Who are Nokia’s main competitors?
Ericsson is Nokia’s closest rival across mobile networks and managed services. Huawei competes across the full telecom portfolio, though regulatory restrictions have limited its presence in Western markets. Cisco competes on IP routing and core networking, ZTE on RAN and fixed-access markets primarily in Asia, and Ciena specifically in optical transport — the segment Nokia is strengthening through the Infinera acquisition.
*Information from Forbes.com and Nokia.com
**Video published on YouTube by “uae6066”

