AI
STRNGR
Boom
BOOM
REAL
Nokia’s rally is not just a meme-like comeback story. The market is repricing the company.
For years, Nokia was seen mainly as a slow telecom equipment supplier, tied to patchy 5G investment cycles. That has changed. AI data centers need optical transport, IP routing, pluggables and high-capacity line systems. Nokia now sells directly into that buildout.
CEO Justin Hotard said demand was “particularly driven by Optical Networks,” with AI and cloud sales up 49% and €1 billion of new orders in the quarter. Nokia also said Optical Networks grew 20%, while comparable operating profit jumped 54% to €281 million.
One analyst note described the move more bluntly, saying Nokia is being “valued against optical networking peers” rather than legacy telecom vendors. That is the insider shift behind the share price. Investors are no longer only asking whether operators will spend more on 5G. They are asking whether Nokia can become a serious supplier to hyperscalers.
The Infinera acquisition matters because it gave Nokia more scale in optical transport, the exact area where AI infrastructure demand is strongest. Management now expects Network Infrastructure revenue to grow 12%–14% in 2026, double its earlier 6%–8% view. Optical and IP Networks are expected to grow 18%–20%.
Hotard also said the company is seeing “a little bit more confidence on supply” and stronger traction in IP networking, after a lumpy period. That matters because supply constraints had been one of the main risks.
The stock’s rise above 50% reflects this change in perception. Nokia is still exposed to weaker mobile-network spending, and that part of the story has not vanished. But the market is giving more weight to AI infrastructure, optical systems, margin expansion and the Infinera integration. For now, that is enough to make an old telecom name look like a new AI infrastructure trade.
The post Nokia Stock Rallies as AI Data-Center Demand Reprices the Company appeared first on ETHNews.