Nokia Beats Profit Expectations as AI and Cloud Growth Power Optical Sales
Nokia reported a stronger-than-expected third-quarter profit, lifted by booming demand for cloud infrastructure and AI-driven data center equipment following its acquisition of U.S. optical networking firm Infinera. Shares surged 10.6% to €5.20 — their highest level in over three years — adding €3 billion to the company’s market value.
Comparable operating profit reached €435 million ($507 million), well above analysts’ forecasts of €342 million, according to LSEG data. Group net sales rose 12% to €4.83 billion, supported by a 19% increase in optical network revenue on a constant currency basis. AI and cloud clients accounted for 6% of total sales and 14% of Nokia’s network infrastructure revenue.
CEO Justin Hotard said AI and data center demand “continues to accelerate,” underscoring the company’s growing focus beyond traditional mobile networks. Despite headwinds from U.S. tariffs, currency weakness, and losing a key AT&T 5G contract to Ericsson, Nokia upgraded its annual operating profit outlook to a range between €1.7 billion and €2.2 billion.

