Nokia Siemens Networks, Chief Executive, Rajeev Suri  stated that he is very confident about the company’s prospects and reiterated its plans to finalize the acquisition of Motorola Inc.’s network equipment assets in the first quarter of 2011.

According to him, overall, they have a lot of confidence and conviction about furthering their progress in 2011. The company feels extremely strong about their portfolio, which is stronger than it has ever been before. Through this, NSN is as strong as it has ever been.

NSN is a joint venture between Finland’s Nokia Corp. and Germany’s Siemens AG.

As per Suri, a week before the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, their owners stated that on their behalf there will be slight growth in industry revenue, which means they see just a little bit of growth, and that given the trend in mobile broadband and services, they believe that the company will outgrow the market and that non-IFRS operating margin will be above break-even.

NSN’s current guidance excludes the Motorola acquisition. Suri added that they will update their outlook when the Motorola acquisition is complete.

Suri also stated that NSN hopes to finalize its planned acquisition of most of Motorola’s network equipment assets in the first quarter of this year.

If the deal closes, NSN will get an important inroad into the lucrative U.S. market.

Suri also commented on interest from private equity firms in buying a stake in NSN from its parent companies. He stated that their shareholders have been talking to a few private equity players and time will tell them how talks progress and which player that will be.

Motorola Mobility expects loss in Q1

U.S. handset maker Motorola Inc. is expecting to band up another loss in its mobile phone division next quarter.

According to Motorola co-Chief Executive Sanjay Jha, the company expects a loss in mobile devices in Q1, although he expected it would be significantly improved from a year ago. As for the current quarter, it is proceeding quite well.

Motorola’s mobile phone division has reported a 20% increase in revenue to $2 billion last quarter and an operating loss of $43 million compared with an operating loss of $216 million a year earlier.

According to Jha, tablet computers such as Apple’s popular iPad will present a very important growth opportunity for the company. There’s a race to the bottom for some players. You will not see the company participating in this race to the bottom.

Jha added that investment in building the Motorola brand in Europe wasn’t a priority right now. He is slowly building his base in Europe. He needs to get to a much better position financially before he contemplates that.

Motorola shares jump on split plan

Motorola Inc., the U.S. mobile phone maker has planned to split and with the announcement it has made a jump of 7%.

According to the company, Motorola investors will get one share of Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc., the new company built around the handset unit, for every eight shares they now own. Immediately afterward, it will trade seven old shares of Motorola for one new share in the remaining company, boosting the stock’s value by a proportional amount to lift its market ability.

The phone and set-top box businesses that make up Motorola Mobility will remain under co-Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Jha. Co-CEO Greg Brown will run Motorola Solutions, which will house the company’s remaining businesses including bar-code scanners, walkie-talkies and other emergency-communication equipment.

Motorola, based in Schaumburg, Illinois, rose 35 cents, or 4.6%, to $8.01 at 1:54 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Motorola Solutions will trade under the ticker symbol MSI starting Jan. 4, and Motorola Mobility will use the symbol MMI.

The executive in charge of Dell Inc’s mobile group is leaving the company as it commences a major push into the smartphone and tablet markets.

According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Ron Garriques, who joined Dell in 2007 as part of Chief Executive Michael Dell’s effort to turn around the Round Rock, Texas, computer maker, will depart in January.

According to the spokesperson of the company, Dell’s communications solutions group, which develops mobile phones and other devices like the Streak tablet, will be broken up and its products folded into other units.

According to the SEC filing, Mr. Garriques will remain at Dell until late January and he will serve as a consultant until the end of 2011. His severance payment will total $1.4 million and he will be paid more than $6 million for the consulting work.

Mr. Garriques, a Motorola Inc. veteran, was originally hired to oversee Dell’s consumer business. Under his watch, Dell gained share in consumer PC sales, but saw its profit margins shrink.

Gemalto, French smart card maker and digital security company NV has filed a patent infringement lawsuit in the U.S. against Google Inc., HTC Corp., Motorola Inc. and Samsung Electronics CO., Ltd. and Samsung Telecommunications America LLC.

According to the company’s statement, the lawsuit concerns the use of Gemalto’s innovations in the Android operating system, Dalvik virtual machine and associated development tools and products. The patented technologies in the lawsuit, in particular Gemalto’s Java Card Technology, were developed in the 1990′s at Gemalto’s research and development facilities in Texas.

According to the complaint on the website of the U.S. law firm hired by Gemalto, McKool Smith, the Java Card Technology enables Java applications and applications developed in other high level programming languages to run on resource-constrained devices such as smart cards and mobile phones.

As per the complaint, the Mountain View, California-based Internet search giant Google develops and actively distributes to application developers and device manufacturers what it refers to as the Android Platform, which incorporates Gemalto’s patented Java Card Technology without its permission. Taiwan’s HTC, U.S. telecommunications company Motorola and Korean company Samsung Electronics make, use, sell and offer to sell Android Devices having the Android Operating System and Android Applications, including mobile phones. The Android devices provided by defendants that incorporate the Android Operating System and Android Applications infringe one or more claims of the patents-in-suit.

Google Inc.’s Android software grabs the top position in the U.S. among new smartphone buyers, passing the iPhone and BlackBerry platforms.

According to Nielsen,  Android was the top choice for U.S. consumers who bought a smartphone in the past six months with RIM’s BlackBerry and Apple’s iPhone tied for second place.

Android has gained popularity as the software is free to any company who is willing to build phones using it and a wide range of manufacturers like Motorola Inc. and HTC Corp. have adopted it. Verizon Wireless, the largest U.S. wireless operator, has promoted Android devices, and AT&T Inc., the exclusive U.S. carrier for the iPhone, now also offers several Android models.

According to Roger Entner, Nielsen’s head of telecom research, distribution and choice is king. They expand their distribution to Verizon, Sprint and AT&T and introduce a whole swing of devices and their market share goes up like a rocket.

AT&T, the second-largest U.S. wireless operator will start selling three new Motorola Android phones, ranging in price from US$79.99 to US$129.99 with a two-year contract.

In the recent past Nielsen revealed that Android had passed Apple’s iPhone in sales among new U.S. smartphone buyers in the second quarter, though it still trailed the BlackBerry.  While BlackBerry retained the top spot among all U.S. smartphone owners with a 31% share, its lead over Apple as it is declining. IPhone accounted for 28% of users and Android reported 19%.

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It is being claimed that Tablet computers running Google Inc.’s Android will take away all the Apple Inc’s iPad sales this holiday season and might exceed it in a few years as device makers adopt the software for a swing of models.

According to the sources, Samsung Electronics Co. will show the newest Android-based tablet for the U.S. market at an event in New York, with the country’s three largest mobile carriers agreeing to sell the Galaxy Tab.

According to Ed Moran, director of insights at Deloitte Services LP, Google may replicate its success with tablets because its OS is freely available to any company. There are a whole slew of factors behind the success: the open-source nature of it, the lower price, it’s not proprietary to one company.

Dell Inc., Acer Inc. and LG Electronics Inc. claims to make Android tablets. According to co-Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Jha, Motorola Inc., which makes Android- based Smartphones, hopes to introduce a tablet computer early next year.

According to analyst, though Google doesn’t charge for Android, broad adoption of the software may open up related revenue opportunities. The company could increase its mobile advertising sales, expand the market for its search engine and boost its application store. By having an open Android system out there, it’s actually accelerating the adoption. Tablets will increase the amount of time that people stay on some sort of computing device, which expands the traffic and people that Google can monetize.

SINGAPORE/SEOUL: Wrestling with falling mobile phone sales and shrinking market shares, South Korea’s Samsung and LG yearn for the days when their high-tech, pricey phones were the talk of the town.

The South Korean makers face stalled volume growth whereas rivals Nokia Oyj and Motorola Inc are cashing in on trends to go slim and stylish in advanced markets or cheap in emerging markets, such as India.
Analysts say Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and LG Electronics Inc should shift their focus to low-cost phones to catch up, or take the lead, in next-generation technology phones or mobile TV handsets.
“Nokia, Motorola and Sony Ericsson have experienced tremendous growth globally over the last few years – much of this can be attributed to the low-cost handset market, an area where LG and Samsung are not particularly strong,” said Bengt Nordstrom, an analyst with wireless consultancy inCode.
Another issue has been their inability to establish a strong brand, analysts said. Nokia has the scale and brand to control the market, Motorola has achieved cult-status with its blockbuster ultra-thin RAZR, and Sony Ericsson has focused on music and photography, leveraging the Sony Walkman and Cybershot brands to enhance its appeal to younger users. “Samsung and LG’s lack of differentiation is holding them back,” Nordstrom said.
Just two years ago, Samsung was poised to overtake Motorola’s number 2 spot, but its market share is now half the size of Motorola’s, with 26.3 million phones sold against the US rival’s 51.9 million in the April-June quarter.
One reason is the RAZR. Take Chua Chin Yang, a 27-year-old Singaporean freelance writer, who ditched his Samsung C200 handset this year. “I switched to Motorola because its handset designs look better and feel better, compared with Samsung’s, which are bulky and so uncool,” said Chua. “I love the RAZR because it’s so slim, easy to carry and the materials used to make the phone are also hardy.”
Nokia saw a 29 per cent boost to 78.4 million phones, but LG yielded its number 4 position to Sony Ericsson, selling 15.3 million phones against its rival’s 15.7 million.
LG also saw Motorola and Nokia eating into its business with key operators Verizon Communications Inc and Hutchison Telecommunications, leading to losses in its handset business for the second quarter in a row.
“The two megatrends in GSM over the last two years are ultra-thins and smart phones. Samsung has underperformed in both markets,” said Strategy Analytics analyst Neil Mawston. “Samsung cannot afford to miss the next megatrend, whatever it may be.”
With a focus on advanced cellphones and a few low-cost models, Samsung and LG have also missed out on the boom in emerging markets.
“Both Samsung and LG have advanced in next-generation technologies, such as WCDMA, HSDPA, WiMax and multimedia, but these markets have not blossomed yet,” said Suran Seong, analyst with research firm Ovum. “The convergence trend where several technologies or functionalities are packed into a phone, which the Korean vendors have stressed, may not be what all users want,” she added.
LG also had a late entry into the GSM market – the dominant digital mobile standard. About 60-70 per cent of its revenues come from CDMA technology, which is facing shrinking demand. “Starting the GSM business late was one big mistake we made,” LG Electronics finance chief Y.S. Kwon told investors recently.
The world’s two 2G mobile standards are GSM and CDMA. GSM was advocated by governments of western Europe and by firms, including Ericsson and Nokia, while CDMA was backed by the US and companies like Qualcomm Inc.
“The core problem for LG is its limited GSM distribution network. It launches a cool device like the chocolate phone, but struggles to get them on operators’ shelves,” said Mawston. – Reuters

Source- http://www.btimes.com.my

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