The slimmed-down Finnish company said today that it made a third-quarter net profit of 747 million euros (USD 950 million) of the year, compared with a 91 million-euro loss in the same period last year.
The result beat expectations and Nokia Corp. Stock rose more than 3.6 per cent to 6.75 euros in late trading in Helsinki. The profit came despite a 1.2 billion-euro impairment charge following revaluing the Here mapping and locations services.
CEO Rajeev Suri said he was pleased to note strong growth in Nokia's three remaining operations networks, mapping and software. Revenue in the third quarter grew 13 per cent to 3.3 billion euros, from 2.9 billion a year earlier.
He added that the division, which accounts for 90 per cent of Nokia's total sales, is expected to record a full-year operating margin of 11 percent, up from the earlier estimate of 5 to 10 per cent.
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Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics near London said Nokia had clearly benefited from ridding itself of the handset unit that had been unable to meet the challenges posed by Apple's iPhone and Samsung, as well as cheaper Chinese competitors.
"Profits were up fairly strongly. Now that they've shaken off the phone side of things, Nokia is able to operate more freely and is doing better," Mawston said. "The mobile broadband operations are giving them a lift up and they should be doing well."
Also, it said investments in technologies and patent licensing "will take time to come to fruition."
Suri, who joined Nokia in 1995, took over as CEO in May after the completion of the USD 7.2 billion sale of the handset and services unit to Microsoft.
He said the company would continue to develop its mapping and locations services, providing Here maps, which has a near 80 per cent global market share, for phones using the Android operating system, as well as previously providing Samsung users with Nokia maps.