Ericsson’s shares surge 13% after profit beat and minimal tariff concerns
Swedish telecoms giant Ericsson saw its shares soar more than 13% on Tuesday, marking its strongest single-day rise since 2018, after the company reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings and dismissed concerns over U.S. tariffs.
Adjusted EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes) — excluding restructuring costs — reached 15.4 billion Swedish crowns ($1.62 billion) for the quarter ending September, exceeding analysts’ forecasts of 14.1 billion crowns, according to an Infront poll.
The company attributed its strong performance to ongoing cost savings and its leading market share in North America, where it has outpaced rival Nokia in the race to deploy 5G infrastructure. Ericsson’s finance chief Lars Sandström told Reuters that while no firm is entirely immune to tariffs, the company currently sees “no additional impact going forward.”
Although total net sales fell 9% year-on-year to 56.2 billion crowns, they still surpassed expectations of 55.7 billion. Sales in the Americas declined 8% compared to 2024’s strong performance, which benefited from major customer investments and network deliveries.
Ericsson also announced a new five-year partnership with Vodafone to modernize programmable networks and confirmed the completion of its Iconectiv sale, generating a one-off profit of 7.6 billion crowns — potentially paving the way for higher dividends or a share buyback program.

