The Finnish telecommunications equipment manufacturer received a significant endorsement from Wall Street this Wednesday. Morgan Stanley increased its valuation forecast for Nokia to €8.50 from €6.50, establishing the most optimistic target among street analysts per Bloomberg data.
Nokia Oyj, NOK
The financial institution attributes this optimistic revision to robust demand driven by artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure capital expenditure. The analysts further observe that Nokia is capitalizing on expanded network infrastructure investments and encouraging results from competing industry players.
Nokia shares concluded Wednesday’s Helsinki trading session at €6.83. The stock has appreciated approximately 24% through 2026’s opening months.
This upgrade arrives amid a volatile trading period for the security. Nokia experienced roughly 5% depreciation at midweek after penetrating below its 5-day moving average, a technical threshold monitored closely by momentum traders.
This decline followed an impressive rally. Helsinki-traded shares had climbed more than 12% during the preceding week and surged over 37% across the past month, creating conditions favorable for profit realization.
On the New York Stock Exchange, Nokia’s American depositary receipt settled near $7.90 at Tuesday’s market close, advancing 1.28% during the session.
Not every analyst shares this optimistic perspective. DNB Carnegie reduced Nokia from buy to hold status with a $6.50 valuation on March 10. Danske Bank executed a comparable adjustment in late February, matching that price objective.
This sequence of rating modifications has contributed to shareholder uncertainty, compounded by Nokia’s decision to reduce its 2026 profit forecast when announcing Q4 results — despite marginally exceeding earnings projections.
During its latest reporting period, Nokia generated adjusted operating profit of €435 million against net sales of €4.83 billion. These figures exceeded market consensus and demonstrated 12% year-over-year revenue expansion, although profitability declined roughly 10% compared to the prior year.
The most significant expansion has occurred within optical and IP networking segments, where hyperscaler and cloud service provider demand continues accelerating.
Moody’s reaffirmed Nokia’s Ba1 credit rating in December while upgrading its outlook to positive, anticipating profitability enhancement throughout 2026–2028. NVIDIA maintains a 2.9% ownership position in the corporation.
Nokia concluded September 2025 holding approximately €6.1 billion in cash reserves and committed credit arrangements extending well into the coming decade.
Mobile network infrastructure represents a softer performance area. Radio access network expenditure has remained muted, with mobile networks revenue declining about 2% year-over-year in the recent quarter.
During Mobile World Congress, Nokia demonstrated AI-powered radio access network technologies and preliminary 6G research alongside NVIDIA and multiple telecommunications operators.
The comprehensive analyst consensus maintains a cautiously optimistic stance. MarketBeat intelligence from early January indicated a “Moderate Buy” recommendation, comprising 8 buy ratings, 3 hold ratings, and 1 sell rating across 12 covering institutions. The mean 12-month price objective for the ADR hovers around $6.10, though Intellectia AI positions the average nearer to $7.36 with a peak projection of $8.50.
Morgan Stanley’s updated €8.50 forecast now represents the highest price objective available for Nokia among market analysts.
The post Nokia (NOK) Stock Jumps 5% as Morgan Stanley Sets New Street-High Price Target appeared first on Blockonomi.


