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Lex_Nokia: estate sale

Sell off the family silver and before long buyers eye the other heirlooms. News this week that Nokia will not part from its handset business until April is no shock: the sale to Microsoft needs regulatory nods and China’s antitrust processes grind slowly. But since the deal was struck last autumn, investors have been assessing the rest of Nokia: its NSN telecoms equipment business, maps unit and patent portfolio. As the shares’ volatility shows – moving between €2.60 and €6 over the past year – this is not simple.

Nokia is capitalised at €20bn. Net cash at end-2013 was €2.3bn and Microsoft will provide another €5.4bn. Deduct that, and the enterprise value is €12.3bn. Rivals Ericsson and Alcatel-Lucent trade on 6.5 to 7.5 times 2014 consensus earnings (pre-interest, depreciation, amortisation and tax). So multiply the market consensus for €1.6bn of ebitda at Nokia this year by 7, say, and the current price looks a little rich next to its peers’.

The range of analyst estimates for ebitda is wide, however: between €1.2bn and €2bn. The tricky bit is not the NSN business, which looks fairly stable. Its 2013 sales were down but its gross margins rose – much like rivals’. And Nokia has guided to a 2014 operating margin at the top end of NSN’s 5-10 per cent long-term range, in line with the 2013 figure.

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