nokia
Nokia Dropped from Stock Index of Largest 50 European Compan
Fonte: http://www.cellular-news.com/story/50946.php?s=h
"Nokia Dropped from Stock Index of Largest 50 European Companies
By: Ian Mansfield | 19th Sep 2011: 10:09am
Nokia has been removed from the STOXX Europe 50 Index, a benchmark index of Europe's largest listed companies following a review by the index management.
Nokia was dropped from the Index after its share price fell by over a third since the Index was last reviewed last September. Nokia's market capitalization is now around EUR16.7 billion, compared EUR25.6 billion last September.
Stoxx carries out annual reviews, and the selection lists are based on the stocks in the corresponding
benchmark indices and their free-float market capitalization as of August 31, 2011.
The changes came into effect today (19th Sept).
On the web: STOXX Europe 50"
"Nokia Dropped from Stock Index of Largest 50 European Companies
By: Ian Mansfield | 19th Sep 2011: 10:09am
Nokia has been removed from the STOXX Europe 50 Index, a benchmark index of Europe's largest listed companies following a review by the index management.
Nokia was dropped from the Index after its share price fell by over a third since the Index was last reviewed last September. Nokia's market capitalization is now around EUR16.7 billion, compared EUR25.6 billion last September.
Stoxx carries out annual reviews, and the selection lists are based on the stocks in the corresponding
benchmark indices and their free-float market capitalization as of August 31, 2011.
The changes came into effect today (19th Sept).
On the web: STOXX Europe 50"
Life is short, ride hard!!!
Nokia sofre com forte demanda por smartphones na Europa
DA REUTERS, EM HELSINQUE
A explosiva demanda pelo iPhone, da Apple, e por aparelhos com o software Android, do Google, impulsionaram em 48% as vendas de smartphones da Europa ocidental na comparação anual, enquanto a ex-líder de mercado Nokia perdeu mais posições no setor.
"Agora os smartphones dominam o mercado de telefones na Europa ocidental e as fabricantes com fortes portfólios no segmento estão consolidando suas posições", disse o analista do IDC Francisco Jeronimo.
Nokia 600, celular com sistema Symbian; empresa sofre com forte demanda por smartphones na Europa
A Nokia caiu para a segunda posição no seu mercado doméstico no primeiro trimestre, enquanto a Apple a superou em smartphones e a Samsung em vendas totais de telefones.
No segundo trimestre, a fatia da Nokia no mercado caiu pela metade em relação aos três meses anteriores para apenas 11%, e a empresa finlandesa recuou no ranking de smartphones para baixo da Samsung, da desenvolvedora do BlackBerry, a Research In Motion, e da taiuanesa HTC.
"Aparelhos com Android de empresas como Samsung, HTC e Sony Ericsson lideraram o forte volume de vendas e capturaram a maior parte antes detida pelo Symbian (antigo sistema operacional da Nokia), conforme a Nokia se volta para o Windows Phone", disse Jeronimo.
Os primeiros aparelhos da Nokia com o Windows Phone devem chegar ao mercado ainda neste ano.
O mercado da Europa ocidental recuou 3% em relação há um ano --após sete trimestres de crescimento-- conforme a fraqueza da economia golpeia a demanda pelos aparelhos.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/tec/972679 ... ropa.shtml
- A ganância dos outros poderá gerar-lhe lucros.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
Mares Escreveu:Ruptura de um H&S invertído em ~ 4.47 ("neck-line").
Caso passe acima dos 5.9, irá romper uma cunha descendente, que vem desde o início do ano, colocando a Nokia com perspectívas muito positivas no médio prazo.
g.a.
A Nokia rompeu a "neck-line"...
- A ganância dos outros poderá gerar-lhe lucros.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
Ruptura de um H&S invertído em ~ 4.47 ("neck-line").
Caso passe acima dos 5.9, irá romper uma cunha descendente, que vem desde o início do ano, colocando a Nokia com perspectívas muito positivas no médio prazo.
g.a.
Caso passe acima dos 5.9, irá romper uma cunha descendente, que vem desde o início do ano, colocando a Nokia com perspectívas muito positivas no médio prazo.
g.a.
- Anexos
-
- Nokia_Ago_2011_a.jpg (92.99 KiB) Visualizado 2804 vezes
- A ganância dos outros poderá gerar-lhe lucros.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
Claro que não. Apenas acho que devíamos dar mais cartas e não deixar que sejam apenas os outros a dominar.Elias Escreveu:ninja1200 Escreveu:Já seria altura dos Europeus apoiarem aquilo que é nosso. Cada vez os Americanos dominam mais o mercado, logo seguidos dos asiáticos. A Europa que tinha a Nokia, vai acabar por perde-la.
No fundo é triste...
Ninja,
És contra a globalização?
Estão aqui em jogo os interesses de todos nós, da mesma forma como também os Americanos não gostariam que a Europa os dominasse. É natural.
- Mensagens: 259
- Registado: 29/11/2007 11:03
- Localização: UK/Almada
ninja1200 Escreveu:Já seria altura dos Europeus apoiarem aquilo que é nosso. Cada vez os Americanos dominam mais o mercado, logo seguidos dos asiáticos. A Europa que tinha a Nokia, vai acabar por perde-la.
No fundo é triste...
Ninja,
És contra a globalização?
- Mensagens: 35428
- Registado: 5/11/2002 12:21
- Localização: Barlavento
Microsoft to buy Nokia in a few weeks
Microsoft will buy Nokia in a matter of weeks, according to the influential mobile analyst who first broke the news that Nokia would be producing Windows Phone powered handsets.
According to an unsubstantiated tweet from the seemingly extraordinarily well connected Eldar Murtazin of Mobile Review, the companies have agreed what a price of around $27 billion, despite some hard negotiating from the Big M.
Murtazin stated: “Finally. Nokia could be sold in a few weeks. Price 27billions [sic] for the whole company. Microsoft in a hurry but want to pay much less.”
The editor of the Russian site, who it is alleged works as an analyst for some of Nokia’s major rivals, has been forecasting a Nokia sell-off for months now – much to the chagrin of Nok Nok’s movers and shakers and the derision of some tech watchers who regard much of his forthright commentary as pure conjecture.
However, there are some very real advantages for Microsoft that add a veneer of credibility to his statements. Not least among them being that acquiring a mobile manufacturer would enable the Redmond-based company to exert more control over its Windows platform.
What’s more, we’ve learned that dismissing Murtazin isn’t something you do lightly – especially where Nokia is concerned.
Not only was he proved correct when he forecast that Nokia Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo was not long for his position at the top of the tree. Murtazin was also bang on in forecasting that Nokia would retire its Ovi brand for app stores and services.
fonte:
http://www.uswitch.com/mobiles/news/201 ... 7_billion/
Sim, OPA's anunciadas a regra é não passarem de rumores..
Mas ao que parece a fonte dos rumores tem acertado nos últimos acontecimentos à volta da Nokia...
- Mensagens: 162
- Registado: 5/5/2011 12:11
- Localização: 15
Nokia Oyj (NOK1V), the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones by volume, climbed the most in 1 1/2 years in Helsinki trading after Google Inc. (GOOG) agreed to acquire Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. for about $12.5 billion.
Google, whose Android software powers handsets made by Motorola and dozens of manufacturers including Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Electronics Inc. (066570), will win wireless patents it needs to compete against Apple Inc.’s iPhone. The linkup may shift some Android phone manufacturers away from Google to consider platforms such as Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)’s Windows Phone, which was adopted by Nokia this year, said Lee Simpson, an analyst at Jefferies International in London.
“It might start to put Microsoft into focus as an alternative platform now, which could indirectly benefit Nokia,” Simpson, who has an “underperform” rating on Nokia shares, said in a telephone interview.
Espoo, Finland-based Nokia surged as much as 53.2 cents, or 14 percent, to 4.28 euros, the steepest increase since January 2010. The stock was up 11 percent to 4.15 euros as of 5:12 p.m., valuing the company at 15.5 billion euros ($22.4 billion). Microsoft added 1.3 percent to $25.43 in New York.
Chief Executive Officer Stephen Elop, a former Microsoft executive who took over in September last year, is retiring Nokia’s Symbian operating system in favor of Windows Phone as he seeks to arrest a loss in smartphone market share to iPhones and Android handsets.
‘Massive Catalyst’
The linkup with Microsoft has fueled speculation that U.S. software company may take over Nokia. Elop said as recently as on June 1 that the speculation was “baseless.”
Today’s deal “could prove to be a massive catalyst for the Windows Phone ecosystem,” James Etheridge, a spokesman for Nokia, said in an e-mail.
“The main player who can buy Nokia is Microsoft and they practically already own them,” Simpson said. “They practically took out Nokia’s smartphone strategy for nothing at the start of the year and no one else would be allowed to buy them underneath Microsoft’s nose.”
Taoyuan, Taiwan-based HTC Corp., one of the largest manufacturers of handsets based on Android, said a linkup of Mountain View, California-based Google with Motorola will strengthen “the whole Android ecosystem.”
“This is something that is important for Google to do and important for the whole Android ecosystem to do,” HTC Chief Financial Officer Winston Yung said in a phone interview. “We’re happy that Android is taking steps to strengthen its patent portfolio. It will be beneficial for the whole group, the whole camp.”
Representative at Samsung and LG couldn’t immediately be reached for comment on a public holiday in South Korea.
Fonte: Bloomberg.com
Google, whose Android software powers handsets made by Motorola and dozens of manufacturers including Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Electronics Inc. (066570), will win wireless patents it needs to compete against Apple Inc.’s iPhone. The linkup may shift some Android phone manufacturers away from Google to consider platforms such as Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)’s Windows Phone, which was adopted by Nokia this year, said Lee Simpson, an analyst at Jefferies International in London.
“It might start to put Microsoft into focus as an alternative platform now, which could indirectly benefit Nokia,” Simpson, who has an “underperform” rating on Nokia shares, said in a telephone interview.
Espoo, Finland-based Nokia surged as much as 53.2 cents, or 14 percent, to 4.28 euros, the steepest increase since January 2010. The stock was up 11 percent to 4.15 euros as of 5:12 p.m., valuing the company at 15.5 billion euros ($22.4 billion). Microsoft added 1.3 percent to $25.43 in New York.
Chief Executive Officer Stephen Elop, a former Microsoft executive who took over in September last year, is retiring Nokia’s Symbian operating system in favor of Windows Phone as he seeks to arrest a loss in smartphone market share to iPhones and Android handsets.
‘Massive Catalyst’
The linkup with Microsoft has fueled speculation that U.S. software company may take over Nokia. Elop said as recently as on June 1 that the speculation was “baseless.”
Today’s deal “could prove to be a massive catalyst for the Windows Phone ecosystem,” James Etheridge, a spokesman for Nokia, said in an e-mail.
“The main player who can buy Nokia is Microsoft and they practically already own them,” Simpson said. “They practically took out Nokia’s smartphone strategy for nothing at the start of the year and no one else would be allowed to buy them underneath Microsoft’s nose.”
Taoyuan, Taiwan-based HTC Corp., one of the largest manufacturers of handsets based on Android, said a linkup of Mountain View, California-based Google with Motorola will strengthen “the whole Android ecosystem.”
“This is something that is important for Google to do and important for the whole Android ecosystem to do,” HTC Chief Financial Officer Winston Yung said in a phone interview. “We’re happy that Android is taking steps to strengthen its patent portfolio. It will be beneficial for the whole group, the whole camp.”
Representative at Samsung and LG couldn’t immediately be reached for comment on a public holiday in South Korea.
Fonte: Bloomberg.com
- Mensagens: 369
- Registado: 9/6/2009 18:55
- Localização: 11
Cinco dias depois de a Moody's ter cortado o rating da empresa a Standard & Poor's segue o mesmo caminho. Porque? Está cada vez mais atrás no comboio dos Smartphones.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-0 ... s-cut.html
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-0 ... s-cut.html
- Mensagens: 465
- Registado: 29/3/2010 17:06
- Localização: Algarve
Nokia encerra trimestre com prejuízo de US$ 699 milhões
A Nokia, maior fabricante mundial de celulares em termos de volume, encerrou o segundo trimestre com prejuízo de 492 milhões de euros (US$ 699 milhões), revertendo resultado positivo de um ano antes e perdendo a liderança do mercado de smartphones para a Apple.
Apesar disso, a companhia registrou um lucro operacional acima do esperado pelo mercado, excluindo certos itens, favorecida por receitas de 430 milhões de euros geradas por pagamento de royalties, incluindo as devidas pela Apple após vitória da empresa finlandesa em um processo judicial contra a rival norte-americana.
O lucro operacional somou 391 milhões de euros (US$ 555,1 milhões) acima de todas as previsões de analistas, que variaram de prejuízo de 35 milhões a lucro de 285 milhões.
As ações da empresa subiam 1,2% às 10h14 (horário de Brasília), reduzindo alta que chegou a 3,5% mais cedo.
A Nokia informou ter vendido 16,7 milhões de smartphones no período, perdendo o posto de maior fabricante de celulares inteligentes para a Apple, que vendeu 20,3 milhões de unidades do iPhone.
A empresa finlandesa criou o mercado de smartphones em 1996 com o primeiro modelo Communicator, mas nos últimos anos não conseguiu responder ao crescimento no segmento das rivais Apple e Research in Motion.
"O caminho de recuperação da Nokia será longo. A deterioração da performance da empresa em smartphones mostra que tempo é a essência na reconstrução de um portfólio coerente de produtos baseados no Windows Phone 7 em 2012", afirmou o analista Geoff Blaber, da CCS.
O preço da ação da Nokia caiu pela metade desde fevereiro, quando a empresa revelou sua mudança para a plataforma da Microsoft em meio às preocupações de que a companhia perca muita participação de mercado antes de que os novos modelos de aparelhos cheguem às prateleiras.
A Nokia afirmou no balanço que espera que seus negócios com celulares continuem lucrativos no terceiro trimestre, contrariando expectativa de analistas de que as operações da empresa sofreriam mais enfraquecimento.
"A previsão para o terceiro trimestre foi um alívio. Parece que não vai ser tão ruim quanto o temido", disse Hannu Rauhala, analista do Pohjola Bank.
http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/mercado/94 ... hoes.shtml
- A ganância dos outros poderá gerar-lhe lucros.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
- A sua ganância poderá levá-lo à ruína.
Re: E a Finlândia?
lsilva4 Escreveu:brimbela Escreveu:Nos idos de 2004 estive 6 meses a trabalhar para a Nokia, na Finlândia.
Não tenho dados para sustentar o que vou escrever, mas a sensação com que fiquei é que a Finlândia sem a NOKIA é mais ou menos o mesmo que o Médio Oriente sem petróleo, ou seja, pouco mais abetos e lagos.
Se calhar ainda vamos ter que voltar a mandar sardinhas para lá...
Também não tenho dados, mas conheço alguém que desde à muitos anos para cá vai aos headquarters da NOKIA dar umas conferências...e o seu parecer vai precisamente no mesmo sentido. A NOKIA é essencial para o equilíbrio do estado Finlandês, para muitas instituições de caridade, outras empresas da região, well to sum up - para o país no seu todo.
Mesmo estando em claro declínio continua uma grande empresa e muito provavelmente ainda terá umas palavrinhas a dizer...
Cumprimentos
Bem Visto e penso que em breve ser ira mexer para evitar futuros downgrades.
- Mensagens: 535
- Registado: 17/5/2011 18:41
- Localização: 10
Re: E a Finlândia?
brimbela Escreveu:Nos idos de 2004 estive 6 meses a trabalhar para a Nokia, na Finlândia.
Não tenho dados para sustentar o que vou escrever, mas a sensação com que fiquei é que a Finlândia sem a NOKIA é mais ou menos o mesmo que o Médio Oriente sem petróleo, ou seja, pouco mais abetos e lagos.
Se calhar ainda vamos ter que voltar a mandar sardinhas para lá...
Também não tenho dados, mas conheço alguém que desde à muitos anos para cá vai aos headquarters da NOKIA dar umas conferências...e o seu parecer vai precisamente no mesmo sentido. A NOKIA é essencial para o equilíbrio do estado Finlandês, para muitas instituições de caridade, outras empresas da região, well to sum up - para o país no seu todo.
Mesmo estando em claro declínio continua uma grande empresa e muito provavelmente ainda terá umas palavrinhas a dizer...
Cumprimentos
Pensa e faz que pensas. Do cansaço dos outros faz a tua oportunidade. Faz tocar o despertador para emoções alheias. Mais importante que tudo, FAZ!
- Mensagens: 247
- Registado: 12/11/2009 22:20
- Localização: Lisboa/Castelo Branco
A Nokia vive momentos difíceis. As acções da tecnológica fecharam hoje em mínimos de Janeiro de 1998 e perderam22% nas últimas cinco sessões. Mas a queda na bolsa não está sozinha. A descida também se deu no “rating” da dívida.
A Fitch decidiu hoje descer a sua notação financeira para apenas um nível acima de “lixo”, descendo em dois degraus de “BBB+” para “BBB-”. A vigilância é “negativa”, o que indica que poderão vir a acontecer novos cortes. A acontecerem, a Nokia deixará o terreno em que a agência de notação de risco aconselha investimento.
Este ano, a tecnológica já tinha sido cortada pela Standard & Poor’s e pela Moody’s, estando quatro níveis acima do “lixo” para cada uma delas (A- e A3, respectivamente). Na semana passada, a segunda colocou a vigilância da empresa finlandesa sob vigilância negativa.
A razão para o corte da Fitch é a perda de quota de mercado no segmento dos “smartphones”, onde o Symbian não se tem conseguido impor. Esta desceu de 50,8% para 25,5% em quatro anos, de acordo com dados da Gartner, citados pela Bloomberg.
“A descida do ‘rating’ e a vigilância negativa reflectem as sérias preocupações que a Fitch tem acerca do ritmo acelerado da erosão da quota de mercado do negócio do aparelho Symbian”, refere a nota da Fitch.
Especificamente, a agência de “rating” escreve que “o ritmo de deterioração subiu desde que a Nokia decidiu mudar-se para um sistema operativo alternativo e parece que os consumidores estão a deixar estes aparelhos para versões Android mais baratas ou ‘smartphones’ Android ou Apple”.
Queda na bolsa de 22% em cinco dias
No passado dia 1 de Abril, a Nokia afundou para um mínimo de 13 anos, ao descer aos 4,266 euros. No dia anterior, a empresa tinha fechado a cair mais de 17%. A tecnológica liderada por Stephen Elop reviu em baixa as previsões de venda, dizendo que no segundo trimestre, os dispositivos que negoceia não iriam permitir que o montante conseguido ficasse no intervalo de 6,1 mil milhões e 6,6 mil milhões de euros.
Desde o valor de início de transacção do dia 31, a Nokia já perdeu 22% do seu valor, num total de cinco sessões.
Hoje, a empresa já perdeu mais de 2% mas encerrou a recuar 1,54% para 4,48 euros. A Nokia não fechava a um preço tão inferior desde Janeiro de 1998.
A esperança passa agora pela nova linha de telefones com base no sistema operativo Windows Phone 7, anunciada pelo CEO Stephen Elop, após a parceria entre as duas tecnológicas.
In Negocios
A Fitch decidiu hoje descer a sua notação financeira para apenas um nível acima de “lixo”, descendo em dois degraus de “BBB+” para “BBB-”. A vigilância é “negativa”, o que indica que poderão vir a acontecer novos cortes. A acontecerem, a Nokia deixará o terreno em que a agência de notação de risco aconselha investimento.
Este ano, a tecnológica já tinha sido cortada pela Standard & Poor’s e pela Moody’s, estando quatro níveis acima do “lixo” para cada uma delas (A- e A3, respectivamente). Na semana passada, a segunda colocou a vigilância da empresa finlandesa sob vigilância negativa.
A razão para o corte da Fitch é a perda de quota de mercado no segmento dos “smartphones”, onde o Symbian não se tem conseguido impor. Esta desceu de 50,8% para 25,5% em quatro anos, de acordo com dados da Gartner, citados pela Bloomberg.
“A descida do ‘rating’ e a vigilância negativa reflectem as sérias preocupações que a Fitch tem acerca do ritmo acelerado da erosão da quota de mercado do negócio do aparelho Symbian”, refere a nota da Fitch.
Especificamente, a agência de “rating” escreve que “o ritmo de deterioração subiu desde que a Nokia decidiu mudar-se para um sistema operativo alternativo e parece que os consumidores estão a deixar estes aparelhos para versões Android mais baratas ou ‘smartphones’ Android ou Apple”.
Queda na bolsa de 22% em cinco dias
No passado dia 1 de Abril, a Nokia afundou para um mínimo de 13 anos, ao descer aos 4,266 euros. No dia anterior, a empresa tinha fechado a cair mais de 17%. A tecnológica liderada por Stephen Elop reviu em baixa as previsões de venda, dizendo que no segundo trimestre, os dispositivos que negoceia não iriam permitir que o montante conseguido ficasse no intervalo de 6,1 mil milhões e 6,6 mil milhões de euros.
Desde o valor de início de transacção do dia 31, a Nokia já perdeu 22% do seu valor, num total de cinco sessões.
Hoje, a empresa já perdeu mais de 2% mas encerrou a recuar 1,54% para 4,48 euros. A Nokia não fechava a um preço tão inferior desde Janeiro de 1998.
A esperança passa agora pela nova linha de telefones com base no sistema operativo Windows Phone 7, anunciada pelo CEO Stephen Elop, após a parceria entre as duas tecnológicas.
In Negocios
" Richard's prowess and courage in battle earned him the nickname Coeur De Lion ("heart of the lion")"
Lion_Heart
Lion_Heart
E a Finlândia?
Nos idos de 2004 estive 6 meses a trabalhar para a Nokia, na Finlândia.
Não tenho dados para sustentar o que vou escrever, mas a sensação com que fiquei é que a Finlândia sem a NOKIA é mais ou menos o mesmo que o Médio Oriente sem petróleo, ou seja, pouco mais abetos e lagos.
Se calhar ainda vamos ter que voltar a mandar sardinhas para lá...
Não tenho dados para sustentar o que vou escrever, mas a sensação com que fiquei é que a Finlândia sem a NOKIA é mais ou menos o mesmo que o Médio Oriente sem petróleo, ou seja, pouco mais abetos e lagos.
Se calhar ainda vamos ter que voltar a mandar sardinhas para lá...
Já foi "desmentido", mas ainda assim...
Microsoft to buy Nokia's mobile phone business for $19 billion?
This is complete rumor, but the story is picking up steam around the Web.
Eldar Murtazin has Tweeted today that Microsoft is set to purchase Nokia's mobile phone business for $19 billion cash.
Murtazin said two weeks ago that the software giant was in talks with Nokia about purchasing the unit, but a Nokia spokesperson shot down the report saying "Eldar’s rumors are getting obviously less accurate with every passing moment."
Reads the latest Tweet:
"One small software company decided last week that they could spent 19 bln USD to buy a part of small phone vendor. Thats it."
Earlier this year, the two companies struck a deal to place Windows Phone 7 on all new Nokia smartphones. Unfortunately for investors, Nokia's stock has seen some pretty big issues of late.
As pessoas são tão ingénuas e tão agarradas aos seus interesses imediatos que um vigarista hábil consegue sempre que um grande número delas se deixe enganar.
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
Niccolò Machiavelli
http://www.facebook.com/atomez
Wallstreetrader Escreveu:Lion_Heart Escreveu:Muito me ri uns tempos atras quando alguem me disse que um gestor de carteiras andava a comprar NOK.
A NOK esta com um pé na cova (até é interessante pois deve ser a maior exportação da Finlandia).
E esta com um pé na cova pois não conseguiu acompanhar a evolução dos telefeones móveis.
Depois de anos e anos a frente deste negócio levou um "banho" quando os smartphones apareceram.
Telefones fracos , sistema operativo pessimo , enfim o falhanço total.
E ainda se aguenta pois existem sempre os irredutivies da marca entre eles muitos tugas. Mas a continuar assim não vai longe.
E o que me dizes da Palm ?
Longo na NOKIA.
Isso agora não é HP?
" Richard's prowess and courage in battle earned him the nickname Coeur De Lion ("heart of the lion")"
Lion_Heart
Lion_Heart
Lion_Heart Escreveu:Muito me ri uns tempos atras quando alguem me disse que um gestor de carteiras andava a comprar NOK.
A NOK esta com um pé na cova (até é interessante pois deve ser a maior exportação da Finlandia).
E esta com um pé na cova pois não conseguiu acompanhar a evolução dos telefeones móveis.
Depois de anos e anos a frente deste negócio levou um "banho" quando os smartphones apareceram.
Telefones fracos , sistema operativo pessimo , enfim o falhanço total.
E ainda se aguenta pois existem sempre os irredutivies da marca entre eles muitos tugas. Mas a continuar assim não vai longe.
E o que me dizes da Palm ?
Longo na NOKIA.
- Mensagens: 535
- Registado: 17/5/2011 18:41
- Localização: 10
Muito me ri uns tempos atras quando alguem me disse que um gestor de carteiras andava a comprar NOK.
A NOK esta com um pé na cova (até é interessante pois deve ser a maior exportação da Finlandia).
E esta com um pé na cova pois não conseguiu acompanhar a evolução dos telefeones móveis.
Depois de anos e anos a frente deste negócio levou um "banho" quando os smartphones apareceram.
Telefones fracos , sistema operativo pessimo , enfim o falhanço total.
E ainda se aguenta pois existem sempre os irredutivies da marca entre eles muitos tugas. Mas a continuar assim não vai longe.
A NOK esta com um pé na cova (até é interessante pois deve ser a maior exportação da Finlandia).
E esta com um pé na cova pois não conseguiu acompanhar a evolução dos telefeones móveis.
Depois de anos e anos a frente deste negócio levou um "banho" quando os smartphones apareceram.
Telefones fracos , sistema operativo pessimo , enfim o falhanço total.
E ainda se aguenta pois existem sempre os irredutivies da marca entre eles muitos tugas. Mas a continuar assim não vai longe.
" Richard's prowess and courage in battle earned him the nickname Coeur De Lion ("heart of the lion")"
Lion_Heart
Lion_Heart
Outro Artigo:
http://seekingalpha.com/article/273193- ... ket-thinks
http://seekingalpha.com/article/273193- ... ket-thinks
- Mensagens: 535
- Registado: 17/5/2011 18:41
- Localização: 10
Nokia Breakup Worth 52% Gain to Battered Shareholders: Real
Nokia Oyj, the world’s largest mobile-phone maker, has destroyed so much shareholder value that it may be worth 52 percent more if sold and broken into pieces.
The Espoo, Finland-based company, once worth almost $300 billion, has seen its market value tumble 77 percent to $25.6 billion yesterday since Apple Inc. introduced the iPhone in June 2007. Including net cash, Nokia is cheaper than its 10 biggest rivals based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
By separating its mobile phone, infrastructure equipment and mapping software businesses and accounting for its patents, Nokia could be worth $39 billion, based on the valuations of comparable companies, the data show. While Nokia cut its revenue forecast at its mobile-phone unit and may earn less this year than any time in almost two decades, sales of its assets could attract companies from Microsoft Corp. to Samsung Electronics Co. and HTC Corp., according to Jefferies Group Inc.
“It’s a classic situation where the parts are worth more than the whole,” said Matt McCormick, a money manager at Cincinnati-based Bahl & Gaynor Inc., which oversees $3.6 billion. “The clock is ticking. Nokia is a good brand, but it’s a tired brand and they need to come up with something. They are going to be a strong candidate for a takeover.”
Laurie Armstrong, a spokeswoman for Nokia, said in an e- mail it won’t comment on “rumor or speculation.” Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft’s Melissa Havel declined to comment.
‘Groundless’
Nam Ki-yung, a spokesman for Suwon, South Korea-based Samsung, said in an e-mailed statement that speculation about an acquisition is “groundless.” Keith Nowak, a spokesman for Taoyuan, Taiwan-based HTC, said the company couldn’t comment.
Nokia this week scrapped its full-year sales and margin forecasts for handsets and services, and said revenue at the unit would fall “substantially” short of its projected range this quarter.
The stock slumped 18 percent to a 13-year low on May 31, exceeding the 14 percent slide on Feb. 11, when Nokia announced a deal to adopt Microsoft’s Windows platform after determining that its own Symbian system couldn’t keep up with Apple’s iOS and Google Inc.’s Android. Nokia’s share of the smartphone market fell to 25 percent in the first quarter of 2011, according to Stamford, Connecticut-based Gartner Inc.
Shares Slump
Nokia fell 4.2 percent to 4.51 euros at 10:17 a.m. in Helsinki, cutting the company’s market value to 16.9 billion euros ($24.5 billion). That compares to a market value of $319 billion for Apple and about $35 billion for HTC, which makes handsets using Android and Microsoft operating systems.
The shares had retreated 39 percent this year before today. Including net cash, Nokia is valued at 3.45 times its Ebitda in the past 12 months, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s cheaper than the 10 biggest communications equipment providers by market value globally, which trade at a median multiple of 8.7 times. HTC is valued at 15.9 times.
“There have to be some players thinking about Nokia,” said Michael Mahoney, senior managing director and portfolio manager at Falcon Point Capital LLC in San Francisco. “This is the point to look at Nokia very seriously.”
In a breakup, Nokia’s three units may be worth about 21.9 billion euros, based on the sales multiples of its competitors this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The breakup value may not include Nokia’s patents, which Tero Kuittinen, an analyst with MKM Partners LP, estimates are worth 5 billion euros. That would bring the total to 26.9 billion euros.
Nokia also has about 6.4 billion euros more in cash than debt, the data show.
Relative Value
Based on analysts’ projections for 40 billion euros in revenue in 2011 and using each unit’s historical rate of growth in the past two years, Nokia’s mobile-phone division may have 26.7 billion euros in sales, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The business would then be worth 14.4 billion euros based on Libertyville, Illinois-based Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc.’s multiple of 0.54 times revenue this year, the data show.
Nokia’s infrastructure equipment unit, which may have sales of 11.6 billion euros this year, would be valued at 6 billion euros using Paris-based Alcatel-Lucent SA’s 0.52 times valuation. The Navteq maps unit, Nokia’s only division to boost revenue since 2008, may be worth about 1.5 billion euros based on Amsterdam-based TomTom NV’s price of 0.84 times sales.
Samsung and HTC are among the companies that would potentially be interested in Nokia’s handset business for its market share, according to Lee Simpson, an analyst at Jefferies in London who has an “underperform” rating on Nokia’s stock.
Huawei, ZTE
Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp. may also be interested in buying Nokia’s assets, he said. Both companies are based in Shenzhen. William Plummer, a spokesman for Huawei, declined to comment on “speculation or rumors.” ZTE’s Mitchell Peterson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Michael Mullaney, who helps manage $9.5 billion at Fiduciary Trust in Boston, said splitting up Nokia won’t change the fact that it’s still a “value trap” because it hasn’t found a way to compete against the iPhone and Android.
Nokia is also unlikely to attract any buyers now because the shares have further to fall, according to American Century Investments’ Michael Liss.
“It’s hard to do a sum-of-the-parts analysis when the floor is falling out and you don’t know where the bottom is,” said Liss, a Kansas City, Missouri-based fund manager at American Century, which oversees $109 billion. “The stock has quite a ways to go before” someone makes an offer, he said.
‘Baseless’
Nokia Chief Executive Stephen Elop said this week speculation that Microsoft agreed to buy his company’s mobile- phone unit for $19 billion is “baseless,” denying a post by the Boy Genius Report website that cited blogger Eldar Murtazin.
Elop has never discussed an acquisition with Microsoft, he said in an interview. “We have a great plan for our future, and we’re focused on executing that plan,” he said. “The rumors are all over the place. There’s no basis for them.”
For Nokia’s shareholders, finding a buyer may be the company’s best option to prevent further losses, according to Michael Holland, who oversees more than $4 billion as chairman of Holland & Co. in New York.
“Over the past few years, when companies have decided to divvy up parts of the company, the market has responded positively and it has been good for shareholders,” he said. “It has to be something people are considering given the nature of the decline in Nokia’s price.”
In Bloomberg
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid ... p4BM&pos=4
The Espoo, Finland-based company, once worth almost $300 billion, has seen its market value tumble 77 percent to $25.6 billion yesterday since Apple Inc. introduced the iPhone in June 2007. Including net cash, Nokia is cheaper than its 10 biggest rivals based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
By separating its mobile phone, infrastructure equipment and mapping software businesses and accounting for its patents, Nokia could be worth $39 billion, based on the valuations of comparable companies, the data show. While Nokia cut its revenue forecast at its mobile-phone unit and may earn less this year than any time in almost two decades, sales of its assets could attract companies from Microsoft Corp. to Samsung Electronics Co. and HTC Corp., according to Jefferies Group Inc.
“It’s a classic situation where the parts are worth more than the whole,” said Matt McCormick, a money manager at Cincinnati-based Bahl & Gaynor Inc., which oversees $3.6 billion. “The clock is ticking. Nokia is a good brand, but it’s a tired brand and they need to come up with something. They are going to be a strong candidate for a takeover.”
Laurie Armstrong, a spokeswoman for Nokia, said in an e- mail it won’t comment on “rumor or speculation.” Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft’s Melissa Havel declined to comment.
‘Groundless’
Nam Ki-yung, a spokesman for Suwon, South Korea-based Samsung, said in an e-mailed statement that speculation about an acquisition is “groundless.” Keith Nowak, a spokesman for Taoyuan, Taiwan-based HTC, said the company couldn’t comment.
Nokia this week scrapped its full-year sales and margin forecasts for handsets and services, and said revenue at the unit would fall “substantially” short of its projected range this quarter.
The stock slumped 18 percent to a 13-year low on May 31, exceeding the 14 percent slide on Feb. 11, when Nokia announced a deal to adopt Microsoft’s Windows platform after determining that its own Symbian system couldn’t keep up with Apple’s iOS and Google Inc.’s Android. Nokia’s share of the smartphone market fell to 25 percent in the first quarter of 2011, according to Stamford, Connecticut-based Gartner Inc.
Shares Slump
Nokia fell 4.2 percent to 4.51 euros at 10:17 a.m. in Helsinki, cutting the company’s market value to 16.9 billion euros ($24.5 billion). That compares to a market value of $319 billion for Apple and about $35 billion for HTC, which makes handsets using Android and Microsoft operating systems.
The shares had retreated 39 percent this year before today. Including net cash, Nokia is valued at 3.45 times its Ebitda in the past 12 months, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s cheaper than the 10 biggest communications equipment providers by market value globally, which trade at a median multiple of 8.7 times. HTC is valued at 15.9 times.
“There have to be some players thinking about Nokia,” said Michael Mahoney, senior managing director and portfolio manager at Falcon Point Capital LLC in San Francisco. “This is the point to look at Nokia very seriously.”
In a breakup, Nokia’s three units may be worth about 21.9 billion euros, based on the sales multiples of its competitors this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The breakup value may not include Nokia’s patents, which Tero Kuittinen, an analyst with MKM Partners LP, estimates are worth 5 billion euros. That would bring the total to 26.9 billion euros.
Nokia also has about 6.4 billion euros more in cash than debt, the data show.
Relative Value
Based on analysts’ projections for 40 billion euros in revenue in 2011 and using each unit’s historical rate of growth in the past two years, Nokia’s mobile-phone division may have 26.7 billion euros in sales, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The business would then be worth 14.4 billion euros based on Libertyville, Illinois-based Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc.’s multiple of 0.54 times revenue this year, the data show.
Nokia’s infrastructure equipment unit, which may have sales of 11.6 billion euros this year, would be valued at 6 billion euros using Paris-based Alcatel-Lucent SA’s 0.52 times valuation. The Navteq maps unit, Nokia’s only division to boost revenue since 2008, may be worth about 1.5 billion euros based on Amsterdam-based TomTom NV’s price of 0.84 times sales.
Samsung and HTC are among the companies that would potentially be interested in Nokia’s handset business for its market share, according to Lee Simpson, an analyst at Jefferies in London who has an “underperform” rating on Nokia’s stock.
Huawei, ZTE
Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp. may also be interested in buying Nokia’s assets, he said. Both companies are based in Shenzhen. William Plummer, a spokesman for Huawei, declined to comment on “speculation or rumors.” ZTE’s Mitchell Peterson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Michael Mullaney, who helps manage $9.5 billion at Fiduciary Trust in Boston, said splitting up Nokia won’t change the fact that it’s still a “value trap” because it hasn’t found a way to compete against the iPhone and Android.
Nokia is also unlikely to attract any buyers now because the shares have further to fall, according to American Century Investments’ Michael Liss.
“It’s hard to do a sum-of-the-parts analysis when the floor is falling out and you don’t know where the bottom is,” said Liss, a Kansas City, Missouri-based fund manager at American Century, which oversees $109 billion. “The stock has quite a ways to go before” someone makes an offer, he said.
‘Baseless’
Nokia Chief Executive Stephen Elop said this week speculation that Microsoft agreed to buy his company’s mobile- phone unit for $19 billion is “baseless,” denying a post by the Boy Genius Report website that cited blogger Eldar Murtazin.
Elop has never discussed an acquisition with Microsoft, he said in an interview. “We have a great plan for our future, and we’re focused on executing that plan,” he said. “The rumors are all over the place. There’s no basis for them.”
For Nokia’s shareholders, finding a buyer may be the company’s best option to prevent further losses, according to Michael Holland, who oversees more than $4 billion as chairman of Holland & Co. in New York.
“Over the past few years, when companies have decided to divvy up parts of the company, the market has responded positively and it has been good for shareholders,” he said. “It has to be something people are considering given the nature of the decline in Nokia’s price.”
In Bloomberg
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid ... p4BM&pos=4
Pensa e faz que pensas. Do cansaço dos outros faz a tua oportunidade. Faz tocar o despertador para emoções alheias. Mais importante que tudo, FAZ!
- Mensagens: 247
- Registado: 12/11/2009 22:20
- Localização: Lisboa/Castelo Branco
Uma empresa que na minha opinião está numa situação idêntica à da RIMM. No entanto, dada a parceria com a microsoft é bem capaz de estar mais perto de uma solução...ainda assim à que esperar pela apresentação de resultados...
Pensa e faz que pensas. Do cansaço dos outros faz a tua oportunidade. Faz tocar o despertador para emoções alheias. Mais importante que tudo, FAZ!
- Mensagens: 247
- Registado: 12/11/2009 22:20
- Localização: Lisboa/Castelo Branco
Quem está ligado:
Utilizadores a ver este Fórum: aaugustobb_69, darkreflection, Google [Bot], jprgodinho, Manchini888, Mr.Warrior, MR32, OCTAMA, PacoNasssa, Pmart 1, PMP69, yggy e 195 visitantes