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Nokia’s Q2 Profit Drops as Dollar Slips and Tariffs Bite: What’s Next?

Nokia takes a financial hit in Q2 as tariffs and currency woes force a sharp forecast cut, can the telecom giant bounce back?

Emmanuella Madu
3 Min Read

If you thought Nokia’s comeback story was sealed, Q2 2025 might make you rethink that optimism. The Finnish telecom giant just saw its operating profit drop a jaw-dropping 29%, down to €301 million on €4.55 billion in net sales, both figures falling short of expectations.

 The Two Big Headwinds

  1. Currency Chaos: A rapidly shrinking U.S. dollar versus the euro shaved off roughly €230 million in profit. That includes a €90 million revaluation charge tied to Nokia’s venture funds.
  1. Tariff Troubles: New U.S. trade tariffs are expected to further knock off €50–80 million from Nokia’s bottom line in 2025.

In short: Operating profit guidance has been revised sharply from €1.9–2.4 billion down to €1.6–2.1 billion. That’s a €300 million haircut or about 16% lower than once forecast

 Quick Snapshot of Q2 Performance

  • Net Sales: €4.55B, up ~2% YoY steady, but nothing to write home about.
  • Operating Profit: €301M, down ~29% YoY, well below analyst expectations.
  • Stock Reaction: Shares plunged roughly 8% in a single day.

 CEO’s Perspective: Future Strategy & Hope

New CEO Justin Hotard, who stepped in April after leading Intel’s AI and data center group, called the revised guidance “prudent” considering these external pressures. He expressed confidence in harnessing AI-powered connectivity as Nokia’s next growth frontier.

Nokia is counting on strong demand in its Network Infrastructure and Cloud & Network Services segments, particularly from hyperscalers and enterprise clients. These areas saw double-digit gains in the half-year report and are expected to climb further.
Also, Nokia Technologies is tracking toward €1.1 billion in operating profit for 2025.

Related: OpenAI drops $30billion A year on oracle to run its AI empire

 Why Currency & Tariffs Are Nokia’s Achilles’ Heel

Even if core ops are steady, Nokia’s performance is being pulled downward by macro forces, especially a weak dollar that drains profits and currency reserves, plus pending U.S. tariffs that cloud the outlook with regulatory uncertainty. The firm estimates each 1-cent drop in the USD/EUR rate could cost them €10–15 million in profit. Think of that like watching your profit slide in slow motion.

Risk vs. Resilience

ElementOutlook
Currency/Tariffs€230M and €50–80M headwind, respectively
Revised Profit Guidance€1.6–2.1B vs. original €1.9–2.4B
Core Growth SegmentsNetwork Infrastructure (+25%), Cloud & Network Services (+14%)
Stock Market ReactionShares down ~8% after announcement
Strategic BetAI-enabled networks, hyperscaler deals, and expansion in defense

Nokia’s Q2 miss isn’t just a stumble, it’s a strategic alarm bell. Despite stable revenue, external economic shocks by way of currency volatility and tariffs have pushed them to revise earnings outlook. But rather than retreat, the company is doubling down on AI, cloud partnerships, and connectivity sectors to stabilize operations and bounce back stronger by year-end.

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