Troubled cellphone maker Nokia unveiled two new
affordable touch-screen cellphone models on Tuesday to defend its mass
market position while it struggles to compete in high-end smartphones.
Basic cellphones have generated most of Nokia’s sales, holding up
much better than smartphones, where it has rapidly lost share to rivals
like Samsung and Apple.
With a profit margin of over 20 percent, these phones are still the
company’s bread and butter even though consumers are increasingly
switching over to smartphones.
“Although they don’t get as much attention as its smartphones,
mobile phones play a key part in Nokia’s future. Mobile phones account
for the majority of Nokia’s revenue today and they are also vital for
building loyalty with potential smartphone users in the future,” said
Ovum analyst Nick Dillon.
Nokia said on Tuesday it expects the Nokia Asha 308 and the Nokia
Asha 309 to retail for about $99, excluding taxes and subsidies, with
deliveries to start in the fourth quarter of 2012.
Analysts have said offering phones around or under $100 is crucial
for the company if it wants to compete with cheaper smartphones using
Google’s Android software.
Nokia still sells almost 1 million basic phones a day but it has
reported operating losses of 3 billion euros ($3.9 billion) in the last
18 months, all while closing sites and cutting tens of thousands of
jobs.
Analysts say the new phones will buy it time but that its new Windows smartphones must succeed to secure its turnaround.
“The new Asha devices are essential to defend Nokia from a raft of
low-cost Android alternatives,” CCS Insight analyst Geoff Blaber said.
“The continued strength of the mobile phone business is testament to
Nokia’s scale and distribution advantages. Defending that business is
critical if Nokia’s smartphone business is to weather the storm.”
The new phones use Nokia’s low-end Series 40 software platform and
hence most analysts do not count them as smartphones, even though Nokia
itself sells them as smart devices in emerging markets.
“The smartphone-feature phone distinction is largely irrelevant in
emerging markets. The Asha devices provide all the features most users
need, including apps, web browsing and Facebook access,” said Blaber.
Nokia has to use its low-end software for the new $100 phones as
Windows Phone requirements for hardware are too high for such cheap
phones. Nokia’s cheapest Windows Phone retails for around $200.
Shares in Nokia were up 1.8 percent at 2.14 euros, outperforming 0.5 percent rise in STOXX 600 European technology index.
Separately on Tuesday, Nokia said it would cut 725 jobs at its South
Korean factory as part of its global cost savings programme unveiled in
June.