
Nokia Oyj (NOK)
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Learn more- Previous Close
12.44 - Open
12.21 - Bid --
- Ask --
- Day's Range
11.60 - 12.23 - 52 Week Range
4.00 - 17.45 - Volume
95,853,408 - Avg. Volume
110,518,644 - Market Cap (intraday)
65.26B - Beta (5Y Monthly) 0.79
- PE Ratio (TTM)
73.06 - EPS (TTM)
0.16 - Earnings Date Jul 23, 2026
- Forward Dividend & Yield 0.16 (1.32%)
- Ex-Dividend Date Apr 28, 2026
- 1y Target Est
15.16
Recent News
View MorePerformance Overview
Trailing total returns as of 7/14/2026, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is OMX Helsinki_PI (^OMXHPI) .
YTD Return
1-Year Return
3-Year Return
5-Year Return
Earnings Trends
View MoreAnalyst Insights
View MoreStatistics
View MoreValuation Measures
Market Cap
69.26B
Enterprise Value
66.08B
Trailing P/E
78.03
Forward P/E
33.11
PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
1.21
Price/Sales (ttm)
3.05
Price/Book (mrq)
2.88
Enterprise Value/Revenue
2.90
Enterprise Value/EBITDA
25.43
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
Profit Margin
3.98%
Return on Assets (ttm)
2.76%
Return on Equity (ttm)
3.72%
Revenue (ttm)
20B
Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
774M
Diluted EPS (ttm)
0.16
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
Total Cash (mrq)
5.83B
Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
15.63%
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
1.6B
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Research Reports
View MoreArgus has published its latest Portfolio Selector, which features its popular Focus List. Each month, Director of Research Jim Kelleher, CFA, surveys the team of Argus Research industry analysts for their timeliest recommendations out of the company's fundamental universe of approximately 500 stocks. The Focus List typically includes 30 stocks: turnover is high, as Jim typically adds three or four new stocks per month. Below are the latest additions, all of which are rated BUY at Argus.
Argus has published its latest Portfolio Selector, which features its popular Focus List. Each month, Director of Research Jim Kelleher, CFA, surveys the team of Argus Research industry analysts for their timeliest recommendations out of the company's fundamental universe of approximately 500 stocks. The Focus List typically includes 30 stocks: turnover is high, as Jim typically adds three or four new stocks per month. Below are the latest additions, all of which are rated BUY at Argus.
The Portfolio Selector features the Argus Focus List, a group of 30 "best idea" stocks generated and regularly updated by Argus' analysts and investment policy committee. It also includes the director of research’s monthly investment strategy column, stock recommendations and sector picks, economic forecasts, and an asset allocation model. This month, the Focus List additions are AbbVie Inc (ABBV); Applovin Corp (APP); Nokia Oyj (NOK); Ulta Beauty Inc (ULTA) and the Focus List deletions are Salesforce Inc (CRM); DoorDash Inc (DASH); International Business Machine (IBM); IQVIA Holdings Inc (IQV).
The Portfolio Selector features the Argus Focus List, a group of 30 "best idea" stocks generated and regularly updated by Argus' analysts and investment policy committee. It also includes the director of research’s monthly investment strategy column, stock recommendations and sector picks, economic forecasts, and an asset allocation model. This month, the Focus List additions are AbbVie Inc (ABBV); Applovin Corp (APP); Nokia Oyj (NOK); Ulta Beauty Inc (ULTA) and the Focus List deletions are Salesforce Inc (CRM); DoorDash Inc (DASH); International Business Machine (IBM); IQVIA Holdings Inc (IQV).
U.S. stocks are trading near record highs - but despite the strong performance, they are being bested by global emerging stocks. A leading industrialized global stock market index, the ETF EAFE (EFA), is up 6% year to date, while the leading emerging market ETF (EEM) has gained 17%. The S&P 500 is no slacker, up 6% year to date, but still below the global emerging stocks. With continued worries over the state of the U.S. economy and some talk of stagflation, global stocks, and especially those that pay dividends, are an option for investors. The lagging U.S. markets represent a change from the recent record. Over the past five years, the S&P 500 has advanced 70% compared to a 28% gain in EAFE and a 14% gain in EEM. But the underperformance has given global stocks a valuation advantage, particularly in the area of dividends. Consider that the EAFE dividend yield of 3.35% is roughly 225 basis points higher than the comparable S&P 500 dividend yield. We think global dividend stocks continue to offer opportunity. In our view, investing in international income stocks is one way to increase portfolio diversification while reducing sensitivity to volatile U.S interest rates. That said, investing in overseas stocks carries its own set of risks, including the impact of currency exchange and geopolitical turmoil. But there are also a number of positives in this asset class for U.S. investors, including a wide selection of companies that pay dividends, robust industry diversification, and, as we have mentioned, higher yields and lower valuations. We used the sort function in the Argus screening tool using these criteria: stocks must carry and Argus BUY rating, trading just below their 52-week high, and with a dividend yield. The following is the resultant list and offers diversity in sectors and countries.
U.S. stocks are trading near record highs - but despite the strong performance, they are being bested by global emerging stocks. A leading industrialized global stock market index, the ETF EAFE (EFA), is up 6% year to date, while the leading emerging market ETF (EEM) has gained 17%. The S&P 500 is no slacker, up 6% year to date, but still below the global emerging stocks. With continued worries over the state of the U.S. economy and some talk of stagflation, global stocks, and especially those that pay dividends, are an option for investors. The lagging U.S. markets represent a change from the recent record. Over the past five years, the S&P 500 has advanced 70% compared to a 28% gain in EAFE and a 14% gain in EEM. But the underperformance has given global stocks a valuation advantage, particularly in the area of dividends. Consider that the EAFE dividend yield of 3.35% is roughly 225 basis points higher than the comparable S&P 500 dividend yield. We think global dividend stocks continue to offer opportunity. In our view, investing in international income stocks is one way to increase portfolio diversification while reducing sensitivity to volatile U.S interest rates. That said, investing in overseas stocks carries its own set of risks, including the impact of currency exchange and geopolitical turmoil. But there are also a number of positives in this asset class for U.S. investors, including a wide selection of companies that pay dividends, robust industry diversification, and, as we have mentioned, higher yields and lower valuations. We used the sort function in the Argus screening tool using these criteria: stocks must carry and Argus BUY rating, trading just below their 52-week high, and with a dividend yield. The following is the resultant list and offers diversity in sectors and countries.
Finland-based Nokia Corp. acquired a majority stake in Alcatel-Lucent SA in January 2016. Having completed the sale of its mobile device business to Microsoft Corp. in April 2014, Nokia is now primarily a network communications equipment provider. The company has realigned its operating model to four main divisions: Mobile Networks, Network Infrastructure, Cloud & Network Services, and Nokia Technologies.
Finland-based Nokia Corp. acquired a majority stake in Alcatel-Lucent SA in January 2016. Having completed the sale of its mobile device business to Microsoft Corp. in April 2014, Nokia is now primarily a network communications equipment provider. The company has realigned its operating model to four main divisions: Mobile Networks, Network Infrastructure, Cloud & Network Services, and Nokia Technologies.
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