This was the week when Nokia was finally toppled from the top of the global smartphone market by Apple, amid a slew of second quarter results that reveal tough trading conditions for all.
Nokia yesterday confirmed it is no longer the market leader in smartphones, with shipments of 16.7 million units in 2Q11 some 3.64 million lower than Apple’s iPhone shipments in the three months to June 25 – its fiscal 3Q11.
The Finnish vendor swung to an operating loss of €487 million ($701 million) from a profit of €295 million in 2Q10. An €890 million fall in profit at its devices and services division is the culprit – offsetting a reduction in losses at Navteq and Nokia Siemens.
Nokia wasn’t alone in felling the pinch during the second quarter. Rival Sony Ericsson also swung to a loss during the period, as supply chain shortages impacted shipments to the tune of 1.5 million units. That left the vendor’s shipments down 31% to 7.6 million devices year-on-year.
Operators weren’t immune to the profit falls, with Malaysia’s DiGi seeing depreciation costs and one off charges wiping 15% off its quarterly income. Profit for the quarter fell to 278 million ringgit ($92.7 million), despite 10% higher revenues.
Norway’s Telenor suffered the same fate as DiGi, though arguably from the other side of the coin. The operator’s post-tax profit more than halved year-on-year to 4.4 billion Norwegian kroner ($814 million), but the figure was skewed by gains from a share sale in 2010 that artificially inflated the firm’s 2Q10 profit.
The operator maintained its guidance full year 2011 guidance of at least 5% organic growth in revenues and an EBITDA margin of 31%, as net subscriber additions of eight million contributed to an 800 million kroner rise in revenues during the quarter.
Networking firm Ciena is more focused on current earnings, revealing a contract to deploy what it claims is Eastern Europe’s first 100G network. The firm will deploy 450km of compatible cable for the Romanian Educational Network, which is expanding its current 4,200km of optical infrastructure.
New Zealand-based Pacific Fibre wins the prize for the longest cable deployment contract of the week, signing up US firm TE SubCom to design and construct a 12,750km subsea cable linking the country with Australia and the US.
Alcatel-Lucent made its gains in the form of a 3G upgrade contract from China Unicom. The deal covers ten key provinces of the country, and comes less than a fortnight after China Telecom hired the vendor to deploy a fiber network.
Rival vendor Cisco was a stark contrast to Alca-Lu, revealing plans to cut 6,500 staff and offload a manufacturing plant in a bid to generate cost savings of $1 billion. The layoffs include around 15% of Cisco’s executive-level staff and could cost the firm $1.3 billion in the near term.
Hacker collective The Hacker’s Choice rebuffed Vodafone’s assertion its home femtocell service is secure, claiming it accessed customer data on the operator’s core network and urging the public not to rely on Vodafone’s software updates for femto boxes.
And media mogul Rupert Murdoch was left foaming at the mouth during a UK parliamentary inquiry into phone hacking at News International newspapers, when a member of the public landed a plate of shaving foam on the firm’s founder.
While Murdoch’s wife was commended for delivering a swift blow to the perpetrator’s head, pie-ing master Aaron Kay called the man an amateur.