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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.

SAP Misses Q3 Revenue Estimates as Cloud Growth Slows, Shares Drop

German enterprise software giant SAP reported third-quarter revenue slightly below analyst expectations, sending its U.S.-listed shares down 3% in after-hours trading. The company posted revenue of €9.08 billion ($10.59 billion), a 7% year-on-year increase but short of the €9.17 billion forecast by analysts, according to LSEG IBES data.

SAP’s cloud business, a key growth driver, rose 22% — its slowest pace since late 2023. CFO Dominik Asam said the company “maintained forward momentum despite an uncertain macroeconomic backdrop.” SAP has been shifting from traditional software licenses to a subscription-based cloud model, seeking more stable long-term revenue streams.

Non-IFRS operating profit grew 14% to €2.57 billion, slightly above estimates, while free cash flow increased 5% to €1.27 billion. Looking ahead, SAP expects 2025 cloud revenue to reach the lower end of its forecast range (€21.6–21.9 billion), but operating profit is anticipated at the upper end (€10.3–10.6 billion). Free cash flow guidance was raised slightly to between €8 billion and €8.2 billion.

TomTom beats expectations as auto sector sales rebound

Dutch navigation and digital mapping company TomTom reported quarterly earnings far exceeding expectations, driven by a recovery in automotive demand and tighter cost management. The company posted an operating profit of 8.4 million euros in the third quarter, sharply higher than analysts’ consensus of 2 million euros and a marked improvement from the 4.1 million euro loss recorded a year earlier.

Following the announcement, TomTom’s shares surged over 7% in early Amsterdam trading. CEO and co-founder Harold Goddijn attributed the strong results to a mix of growing automotive revenues and cost discipline, highlighting that process standardization across customer operating systems has increased efficiency and predictability.

In June, TomTom announced plans to cut 300 jobs as part of an AI-driven restructuring strategy aimed at streamlining operations. The firm’s automotive location technology unit, its largest division, was the only one to post revenue growth — a 2% increase — as global carmakers step up investment in navigation and self-driving technologies.

Despite lingering uncertainty in the car market, Goddijn noted a renewed appetite for automation among manufacturers in Japan, China, Europe, and the United States. While its consumer GPS products continue to see slowing demand, TomTom’s app remains profitable, supporting the development of its high-definition maps and connected driving systems.