Grim Q1 seen for European telecom equipment firms By Paul de Bendern HELSINKI, April 18 (Reuters) - Europe's top telecoms equipment makers are likely to fuel fears that an industry recovery is still some way off when they begin releasing quarterly results this week, as weakening demand bites into both sales and profits. Nokia and Ericsson's results for the first three months of the year, both due on Friday, are expected to be hit by the wider economic slowdown in the United States and tougher market conditions in Europe, where sluggish demand is seen for both mobile networks and handsets. But more importantly, the market will be seeking guidance for the rest of the year from both companies. "I still expect some turnaround this year but I'm becoming more sceptical every day," said analyst Mika Paloranta at Finland's leading brokerage ArosMaizels, adding investors looking to buy Nokia and Ericsson should not do so until after the results on Friday -- at the earliest. Several analysts, including Paloranta, expect Nokia to cut its previously announced 2001 sales targets. And January-March earnings from rivals Alcatel of France and Germany's Siemens due on April 26 will also be high on the agenda of nervous investors looking for signs of when the battered sector and its shares will recover. "Although we have heard warnings from nearly all of our companies under coverage -- Alcatel on mobile handsets, Ericsson on infrastructure, and Nokia on the global handset market -- we still believe additional warnings are imminent," Merrill Lynch said in its European Technology 2001 Q1 Results Preview. Philips , Europe's largest maker of consumer electronics, on Tuesday said it expected to make a loss in the second quarter and may cut 7,000 jobs after weak computer and telecoms markets sent profits diving in the first three months. ERICSSON'S TROUBLES CONTINUE Analysts expect Nokia to havestill made a profit in the first three months of 2001 as it benefited from its position as the world's largest handset maker and is less exposed to the U.S. mobile networks equipment market. But Ericsson, the world's largest maker of wireless networks that help power mobile phone usage, is likely to register a pre-tax loss of 5.05 billion Swedish crowns ($492.6 million) for the quarter, according to a Reuters poll of analysts. Ericsson's loss, which it warned of in March, was caused by its ailing handset unit and a slowdown in business for its profitable mobile networks division. The firm posted a 6.1 billion crowns profit in the same period last year. Ericsson's job reduction moves will also be in focus Friday. Unlike Nokia, Ericsson has been hit by telecoms operators in the United States cutting back orders for mobile networks equipment based on current CDMA and TDMA standards. Nokia does not provide equipment for these technologies and focuses instead on GSM standards. In contrast Nokia, now a rising force in wireless network gear, is seen posting an unchanged first-quarter pre-tax profit of 1.34 billion euros ($1.18 billion), according to a Reuters poll. Nokia was the only one of the top three handset makers not to cut Q1 earnings, but it did lower its sales targets. But for both firms estimates for full-year 2001 were in a wide range, indicating the lack of visibility in the industry. Analysts say Nokia still benefits from huge economies of scale, brand recognition and the ability to predict what consumers want when it comes to handsets, despite a a sharp slowdown in overall market growth. This has so far enabled Nokia to gain market share at a time when rivals are failing to even sell phones at a profit. But the market is still worried that the full launch of high-speed phones using so-called intermediate GPRS technology in Europe late this year may not take off immediately, thus making it harder for the likes of Nokia to tempt consumers with new phones. TOUGH HANDSET MARKET HITTING ALL PLAYERS Motorola Inc , the world's second largest mobile phone maker, last week gave the first indication of the state of the handset market when it reported a worse-than-expected first-quarter loss and warned it did not expect its handset division to turn to profit until the third quarter. But the U.S. group said it expected a gradual increase in sales and profitability in the second half. Both Philips and Alcatel's handset units are loss-making and as a result have said they may consider exiting the business via industry consolidation. Analysts say if Ericsson again fails to live up to its promises of when its troubled handset division will turn to profit, pressure will resurface for the Swedish firm to finally get rid of the unit that has plagued it for several years. "We believe the weak players will become weaker (Ericsson, Alcatel, Philips), while the strong players could face increased pricing pressures but gain market share as the Nokia brand name and portfolio furthers its lead," Merrill Lynch added. SIEMENS Telecoms equipment analysts will also be keenly awaiting Siemens' quarterly earnings, particularly when it comes to networks equipment and handsets, and more details about its own outlook which is seen hurt by difficulties in the chip sector. The German company, now the fourth largest mobile phone maker, has been pushing hard to gain ground here as well as breaking into the wireless equipment market dominated by Ericsson, Nokia and Canada's Nortel Networks . "On the mobile infrastructure side, Siemens should do well this year but on the handsets side they could still face a tough 12 months. I don't think they will make a loss but they will face margin pressure," said Theo Kitz of Merck Finck & Co. Meanwhile Alcatel said last month it expected flat first-quarter operating profits year-on-year, with a robust networking and optics business to counter weak handset sales. "There's not much uncertainty on the first quarter given they've pre-announced, but the second quarter could be difficult and the big focus will be on whether they give guidance or not," said analyst David Sebanjeantet at ABN AMRO in Paris. For related story "U.S. slowdown hangs over Europe's Q1 software results" please click on [nL18440632] or key in code and hit F9 key. For details of poll of analysts' forecasts for Nokia results "TABLE-Nokia Q1 profit seen at EUR 1.34 bln" click on [nL1714897] and for Ericsson survey "POLL-Ericsson Q1 pre-tax loss seen SEK 5 bln" click on [nL1712413]. (With additional reporting by Juho Karsio and Henrietta Haavisto in Helsinki, Anna Ringstrom, Daniel Johansson, Jenny Andersson in Stockholm, Catherine Bremer in Paris and Carmel Crimmins in Frankfurt) ($1=10.251 Swedish Crown) ($1=1.135 Euro) REUTERS Rtr 13:19 04-18-01 |