Technology Stocks | Nokia Corp. (NOK)


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To: Lahcim Leinad who wrote (7210)4/16/2012 12:57:44 PM
From: Amots2 Recommendations   of 8737
 
From your article:

First let me start by saying that I love my new phone -- it has thus far been a much superior experience to Gingerbread.

thanks for posting the link.....

:o))

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From: zax4/16/2012 1:14:33 PM
2 Recommendations   of 8737
 
I love Nokia advertising S-D



Particularly the stuff from outside the USA.

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To: Eric L who wrote (7157)4/16/2012 1:25:00 PM
From: Eric L   of 8737
 
NFC on the Nokia 610 Windows Phone

... a Winphone first.



It’s the first time NFC will be featured on a Windows Phone handset, with the technology not expected to become commonplace on the platform until the introduction of Windows Phone 8/Apollo. You may be wondering how Nokia has managed to add NFC to the 610 if the existing software doesn’t support it. According to Ilari Nurmi, Nokia’s product marketing head, who unveiled the device at WIMA, Nokia’s own NFC software stack has been added to the Windows Phone platform along with the requisite hardware. Any concerns the 610 NFC will be unable to support the next version of Windows Phone when it’s released were put to rest by a Nokia spokesperson, who told NFCWorld.com there won’t be any compatibility problems when the time comes.
>> New Nokia 610 NFC will be first to bring near-field communication technology to Windows Phone

Andy Boxall
Digital Trends
April 16, 2012

digitaltrends.com 





The little Nokia 610 is already a desirable phone, thanks to its classy design and solid feature list, especially for its low price. Now, Nokia has announced a new edition of the device due for release later this year that’s even better value for money, as it adds NFC to the feature list.

Announced at the dedicated NFC trade event known as WIMA in Monaco last week, the 610 NFC is the latest in a line of Nokia phones to use near-field communication, and it links in with increased interest in the technology and the company’s recent NFC accessory releases, including the Play 360 speaker.

This new version of the Lumia 610 doesn’t seem to have changed in any other way, which means buyers will be getting a 3.7-inch touchscreen, 5-megapixel camera with 720p video recording, 8GB of internal memory and an 800Mhz processor.

The Lumia 610 runs a modified version of Windows Phone 7.5, which has been developed to deal with just 256MB of memory and a processor with a lower clock speed than other Windows Phones, enabling Nokia to break into the all-important entry-level smartphone market to take on Android.

A Windows Phone first

It’s the first time NFC will be featured on a Windows Phone handset, with the technology not expected to become commonplace on the platform until the introduction of Windows Phone 8/Apollo.

You may be wondering how Nokia has managed to add NFC to the 610 if the existing software doesn’t support it. According to Ilari Nurmi, Nokia’s product marketing head, who unveiled the device at WIMA, Nokia’s own NFC software stack has been added to the Windows Phone platform along with the requisite hardware.

Any concerns the 610 NFC will be unable to support the next version of Windows Phone when it’s released were put to rest by a Nokia spokesperson, who told NFCWorld.com there won’t be any compatibility problems when the time comes. A price of around 200 Euros — approximately $260 — for the handset was also given, which is only marginally more than the standard Lumia 610.

Besides connecting with compatible accessories, and using NFC tags to switch between settings, the Lumia 610 NFC has been approved for use with both Visa’s payWave and MasterCard’s PayPass wireless payment systems.

Initially available through the Orange network in the UK this summer, it’s unknown whether the budget phone will make it to other networks in other countries, but given the continued interest and increasing adoption of NFC, Nokia is unlikely to miss the opportunity. ###

- Eric -

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From: Eric L4/16/2012 2:00:31 PM
   of 8737
 
Tom's Hardware Comprehensively Reviews Windows 7.5 ...

... after using a Nokia 800 for a month. Link to the review on the Windows Phone board is below:

Message 28084920

Worth a read.

- Eric -

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From: Eric L4/16/2012 2:42:25 PM
   of 8737
 
Beating (or Competing with) Dominant Incumbents ...

... requires Strategy, Execution and Timing. Hard to say if Microsoft/Nokia and other members of Microsoft's Windows Phone have the right strategy, capability to execute, and proper timing, regardless of their combined established competencies and resources. The game's afoot however.

>> How Nokia can beat the iPhone

Rob Enderle
TG Daily
April 16, 2012

tgdaily.com 

... <Big Snip> ... In short, it is less likely that any of the above-mentioned dominant companies would have lost the market had they stayed focused and not screwed up. Really, Sony remains the most telling, simply because it had the stronger brand and was vastly more powerful - collectively - than its competitors, but simply failed to step up and defend its position. Of course, betting on Apple stumbling, at least under Jobs, was a fool’s bet. However ,Tim Cook’s Apple is having issues that, like the price fixing charge from the DOJ, which indicate the new Apple is vastly different than the company overseen by Steve Jobs. ... <Snip> ... Nokia and Microsoft are clearly two industry heavyweights with the resources to beat Apple. The obvious challenge? Strategy, execution and timing. ... To beat Apple's iPhone, competitors need a device that is unique, simple to communicate (market) and of high value to the buyer. As you may recall, the Xbox was largely initially driven by the game Halo, iPod by the ease of ripping and populating music, the Blackberry by two-way paging, and the iPhone by its elegant simplicity. In fact, if you think about it, Apple’s sustaining feature isn’t really a feature at all, but rather a process that conveys a message of elegant simplicity which appears to resonate well with its brand. ... <Snip Rest>. ###

- Eric -

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To: Eric L who wrote (7216)4/16/2012 4:08:09 PM
From: zax1 Recommendation   of 8737
 
wallstcheatsheet.com 

Nokia Corporation ( NYSE:NOK) gets a reprieve from Moody’s, as the rating agency reaffirms its investment grade credit rating, after earlier downgrading it to Baa3 and maintaining a negative outlook. The current rating is said by Moody’s to arise from Nokia’s strong liquidity position and capital structure. The company held gross cash balances of EUR9.8B billion at the end of the first quarter, and a net cash position of EUR4.9 billion, as it focuses upon conservation of cash. Timo Ihamuotila, Nokia’s Executive Vice President and CFO notes that “We are making progress with our previously announced targets to reduce non-IFRS operating expenses by more than EUR1.0B in Devices & Services, and to reduce non-IFRS operating expenses and production overheads by EUR1.0B in Nokia Siemens Networks. Nokia is quickly taking action. Nokia will continue to increase its focus on lowering the company’s cost structure, improving cash flow and maintaining a strong financial position.” Nokia will release its first quarter results on April 19.

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To: Eric L who wrote (7198)4/16/2012 4:11:52 PM
From: pyslent   of 8737
 
" I really don't, other than I assume (could almost guarantee) that some portion of them would have been included in Nokia's Lumia sell-in as reported in the November 11 warning ... "

Thanks Eric,

I guess we don't have the data to do any more than speculate. I'm fairly familiar with launches of this significance on Sprint: ie, Palm Pre shipped with ~50K units at launch, and went on to sell 600K in the launch quarter. A year later, the EVO 4G probably doubled those numbers. With AT&T, I do not believe they have ever reported the sales status of any individual phone model other than the iPhone.


Obviously, the traction of the 900 will be the biggest near term driver of share price, which is also the only catalyst I see until Nokia gets caught up in the tailwind of Microsoft's rolling thunder for Windows 8, esp WOA. The Lumia 610 is a key strategic product, but won't have much of an impact until shipments ramp into the many millions (and therefore replace the lost symbian sales).

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From: zax4/16/2012 11:19:02 PM
   of 8737
 
iPhones and Androids Have a Brand-New Rival
By Anders Bylund (TMF Zahrim) | More Articles
April 16, 2012

fool.com 

AT&T (NYSE: T ) launched the Nokia (NYSE: NOK ) Lumia 900 smartphone with plenty of swagger. One top executive promised that the event would outshine any promotional event AT&T has ever done, including the launches of Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL ) iPhones. "Before you walk in to the store, you know this is our hero phone," said Jeff Bradley, senior VP of devices. "We're going big. We're really bullish."

The phone hit store shelves on Easter Sunday, when pretty much every storefront was closed for business. Despite that wacky blunder, Ma Bell appears to have sold out of its entire Lumia inventory just one week later. AT&T's online store lists both the black and cyan-faced models as "temporarily out of stock."

Spot checks around my neck of the woods also failed to turn up a Lumia 900 in the wild. Store clerks told me that the initial inventory sold out quickly, and that the very small second batch was gone within minutes of hitting the shelves. Of course, nobody wanted to talk about unit volumes, but we're clearly looking at a hot commodity here.

Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN ) appears to have the black Lumia in stock, though the cyan one is backordered for up to two weeks. The two colors are listed as the two best-selling phones in Amazon's catalog at the moment. Mind you, the e-tailer doesn't carry iPhones, which makes it harder to get an objective idea of the relative sales. And either way, Amazon is pretty tight-lipped about its unit volumes and prefers to think in terms of best-seller lists.

So there's a ton of things we don't know about the Lumia 900's first week. We don't have any hard numbers, no press releases about a blowout premiere, no statements from a blushing company representative.

But you can't build pre-launch hype like that and then leave stores with thin and light inventories of the "hero phone." I think it's fair to say that Nokia has its first smartphone success on American soil here. That also counts as a hit for Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT ) , which is eager to get American consumers acquainted with -- maybe even lusting after -- Windows phones like the Lumia.

Apple and the Android gang had better take the Lumia line seriously. Nokia and Microsoft want their share of the trillion-dollar mobile pie, and they're coming to get it.

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From: zax4/16/2012 11:38:32 PM
2 Recommendations   of 8737
 
Nokia: A Compelling Buy For Smart Investors
April 16, 2012 | by: Vatalyst



seekingalpha.com 

Late last week, Jeff Kvall of Barclay's Capital cut his rating of Nokia ( NOK) from Overweight to Equal Weight and lowered his price target to $4 per share. Similarly, analysts at Zacks downgraded the stock to Underperform, stating their belief that the company will face serious margin pressure in a tough industry that is dominated by rivals Apple ( AAPL) and Google ( GOOG). They called their view of the recent alliance between Nokia and Microsoft ( MSFT) "skeptical" as to the potential for success. The downgrades seem like simply the latest in a series of negatives for a company that has been hit by a shift away from its core business in cheap phones by consumers, a significant software glitch on the tails of its most recent release in the smartphone space, and a generally negative view by investors. To put the case in the simplest of terms: They are all wrong.

If one looks simply at Nokia as he or she would any other company, the analysts may be able to make a case for their positions; it is important to remember that they are paid to have an opinion of a given stock within a specific perspective. If one considers the stock through the lens of these analysts, one sees a company that has partnered with one of the world's declining behemoths, Microsoft, in an attempt to compete with arguably the two most powerful companies on the planet. Nokia is not trying to outflank Apple and Google, it is charging straight at them both on what any reasonable analyst might call a suicide mission. The addition of Microsoft and the change of focus for the company is commendable, and the new management has been referred to as " crisp" by Mr. Kvall. But this is David trying to fight two Goliaths at the same time -- not a good bet unless you are using someone else's money.

The Dead Poets Live

If we can take something away from Robin Williams' Professor Keating in the movie Dead Poet's Society, it is that perspective is everything. Sometimes one needs to stand on his or her desk and, with the strength of a barbaric yawp, proclaim that there is a better way to consider this embattled company. The view from the desk top suggests that rather than looking at it purely as a stock, with a per-share price hovering around $4, the stock is better considered as a never-expiring option and as a micro-customizable fixed-income instrument. These seem like a good starting point because while an option may expire worthless and there is no guarantee that Nokia will not change its dividend if things continue to worsen, under the current set of circumstances, the risk/reward profile looks very attractive.

Let's Talk Turkey

As an income play, Nokia is currently trading with a dividend yield of 4.4%. Ericsson ( ERIC) pays a dividend yield of 2.6%, while neither Motorola Mobility Holdings ( MMI) nor Research In Motion ( RIMM) pay a dividend at all. On the income side of things, neither Apple nor Google pay a dividend either. At a time when U.S. treasuries are barely paying 2% and finding any yield at all is extremely difficult, the income available from Nokia looks very appealing. What this means is that if the stock is only able to maintain its price for the period during which an investor holds it, he or she will get a return that is more than double that available in government securities. There is no doubt that Nokia is a far riskier bet that the U.S. government, despite the best efforts of the Treasury and Federal Reserve to the contrary. But given the importance of Nokia within its local economy, it seems unlikely that the company will disappear anytime soon. If anything, at these levels, the company makes an interesting takeover candidate (more on that below).

Consider It An Option

Anytime a stock dips consistently below the $5 per-share level, there is a tendency for investors to consider the stock less attractive. While this certainly should apply to a small-capitalization stock that may be struggling for its very existence, Nokia is a $14.9 billion market capitalization company. Rather than considering the stock purely as an equity investment, if one considers the roughly $4 per share price as an option premium for an option that will never expire, the play looks more interesting. On a valuation basis, the stock is not particularly attractive. It does not have a price-to-earnings ratio because it had negative earnings, where Ericsson has a P/E of 16.8, Research In Motion has a P/E of 5.8, Apple has a P/E of 17.2, and Google has a P/E of 21. The company is no more attractive on an operating margin basis either. It has an operating margin of 1.8% relative to 10.9% for Ericsson, 10.7% for Research In Motion, 33.9% for Apple, and 32.3% for Google.

Still, the question remains: If Nokia is so marginal as an equity investment, does it really make sense to commit capital? If the company is marginal as an equity, it is somewhat expensive as an option. While being advocated as an option in one sense, the investment is an equity position, which means that one will receive the income discussed above. Furthermore, at these depressed prices, the company may be an attractive takeover candidate. While it might be difficult to conceive of the precise strategic advantage that purchasing the company may represent, it is its weakened position that creates the interest. Overall, there are enough positives about Nokia that it should be considered, even if only in small quantities, as a part of any comprehensive portfolio -- despite the negative view of the analysts.

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To: Eric L who wrote (7107)4/17/2012 10:05:29 AM
From: Eric L   of 8737
 
Another reasonably comprehensive and mostly positive Lumia 900 Review (Daily Tech) ...

The review excerpted below is a follow-up to an earlier Lumia 900 review by the same author which was linked here yesterday by 'Lahcim Leinad' and which criticized elements of the Windows Phone browser experience. That 6 day old review statrted out with these comments:

"First let me start by saying that I love my new phone -- it has thus far been a much superior experience to Gingerbread. I will post my in-depth review shortly, but first I would like to highlight that Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), and co. have some potential issues to address. ... Compared to mobile Safari and mobile Chrome, I would describe the mobile version of Internet Explorer as fast and usable, but difficult. Admittedly, part of the problem is the learning curve."

The new review is comprehensive enough and balanced enough to warrant a full read.

>> Review: Nokia's Lumia 900 LTE Advances the Smartphone Experience

Jason Mick
Daily Tech
April 17, 2012

dailytech.com 

... I've now had a week with my new Lumia 900 LTE from Nokia Oyj. (HEL:NOK1V) and impressions have started to form. ... I think the Lumia 900 is quite possibly the best smartphone I've encountered in terms of the average user experience. That's not to say there aren't some glaring annoyances here or weaknesses -- because there are. But simply looking at the overall experience, I would say this Windows Phone is simpler to use, more fluid, and more fun than the iPhone 4S or front of the pack Androids like the Galaxy Nexus LTE. ... <Big Snip> ... I think the Lumia 900 is quite possibly the best smartphone I've encountered in terms of the average user experience. That's not to say there aren't some glaring annoyances here or weaknesses -- because there are. But simply looking at the overall experience, I would say this Windows Phone is simpler to use, more fluid, and more fun than the iPhone 4S or front of the pack Androids like the Galaxy Nexus LTE. For now the handful of disadvantages leave the new Windows Phone experience a work in progress, but still arguably an industry leader, when paired with a premium handset like the Lumia 900 LTE. That may sound like an ad, but I have to live my device every day, just like you have to live with yours. Having just spent a week with Windows Phone 7 on a proper piece of hardware, I find it hard to imagine going back to Gingerbread, or even Ice Cream Sandwich. ###

- Eric -

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