Ericsson profit beats expectations on 5G demand despite China setback
Sweden’s Ericsson reported third-quarter core earnings above estimates on Tuesday, as strong sales of 5G equipment in most of the world offset a loss of market share in mainland China and a hit from the global supply chain problems.
Sweden banned China’s Huawei from selling 5G gear in the country a year ago and Ericsson has since lost most of its share in the latest rounds of telecom tenders in China.
The proportion of revenue Ericsson earns from China has dropped to around 3% of the total from 10-11%, Chief Financial Officer Carl Mellander said in an interview, offsetting gains made as Ericsson filled voids left by Huawei in several countries as it retreated under pressure from the U.S. government.
Mellander said the decline started in the second quarter and would show as a year-on-year loss until the same period of next year. China sales declined by 3.6 billion Swedish crowns ($418.14 million) in the third quarter alone and the company is now planning to resize its sales and delivery organisation in the country.
Ericsson, a rival of Nokia, also said the global supply chain issues had started to bite.
“Late in Q3 we experienced some impact on sales from disturbances in the supply chain, and such issues will continue to pose a risk,” CEO Börje Ekholm said in a statement.
The company was not able to deliver certain hardware to its customers due to chip shortage at suppliers, coupled with logistics problems, leading to a drop in revenue, Mellander said.
Quarterly adjusted operating earnings rose to 8.8 billion Swedish crowns ($1.02 billion) from 8.6 billion a year ago, beating the mean forecast of 7.85 billion, according to Refinitiv estimates.
Securing 5G contracts from all three U.S. telecom firms — Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile — has helped the company to absorb the losses in China.
Total revenue fell 2% to 56.3 billion crowns, missing the 58.14 billion crowns forecast by analysts.
FacebookTwitterLinkedin
For all the latest Technology News Click Here
For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News.