Posted: 26 April 2012 0309 hrs
HELSINKI: Nokia
chairman Jorma Ollila indicated in an interview with Finnish media on
Wednesday that his company was no longer the world's biggest mobile
phone maker after 14 years at the top.
"Nokia was number one for 14 years and still has the chance to be so again," Ollila told commercial broadcaster MTV3.
The
former Nokia chief executive, who will be leaving his position as
chairman of the board next week, thus provided the first hint that the
company is no longer leader.
Media reports have indicated for
more than a week that Nokia was losing the top spot to Samsung, who
along with Apple is already well ahead of Nokia in the lucrative smart
phone sector.
Nokia announced disastrous first quarter results
last week, posting a net loss of 929 million euros ($1.2 billion) and
showing sales down 30 percent year-on-year for the first three months of
the year.
The company also acknowledged that it had sold just
82.7 million mobile devices during the quarter, down from 108.5 million a
year earlier.
While Samsung is not set to release its full first
quarter results with details of the total number of units sold until
Friday, analysts reportedly expect the figure to land somewhere between
85 and 92 million units.
Nokia has for more than a year been
undergoing a major restructuring, phasing out its Symbian smartphones in
favour of a partnership with Microsoft.
On Tuesday, ratings agency Fitch cut its debt rating to junk status.
Ollila
remained upbeat however, pointing out that Nokia had in the past also
run into bouts of trouble but had always landed on its feet again.
"I
am absolutely convinced there is a turn-around in sight," he told MTV3
Wednesday, adding that "there are indications that it will come at the
end of this year."
- AFP/de
No comments:
Post a Comment