In a striking realignment of market valuations, Nokia Oyj—a company widely written off by consumers after the collapse of its mobile phone empire—has quietly surged to a market capitalization of nearly $90 billion, placing it on equal footing with global consumer electronics giant Xiaomi Corp.
The valuation convergence highlights a profound structural shift on Wall Street and global capital markets. Xiaomi, which commands a market capitalization of approximately 770 billion HKD (over $90 billion USD), operates a highly visible, top-three global smartphone manufacturing footprint and a rapidly expanding electric vehicle business. Conversely, Nokia has spent the last thirteen years invisible to the consumer market. Yet, its stock price has doubled over the past year, achieving a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 54. The parity demonstrates that capital markets are aggressively placing higher premiums on upstream artificial intelligence infrastructure over downstream consumer hardware endpoints.
The Thirteen-Year Pivot: From Consumer Giant to End-to-End Telecom Foundation
Nokia’s current multi-billion-dollar valuation is not a product of market volatility, but the result of a deliberate, decade-long structural transformation away from consumer electronics.
The Departure from Mobile (2013): In September 2013, Nokia finalized the sale of its failing mobile phone division to Microsoft for €5.44 billion, a fraction of its peak revenue. While the "Nokia moment" became a business school textbook case for corporate failure, the company used that exact month to acquire Siemens’ stake in Nokia Siemens Networks for €1.7 billion to anchor its telecom infrastructure pivot.
The Bell Labs Acquisition (2016): Nokia executed a massive €15.6 billion acquisition of Alcatel-Lucent. By divesting its "Here" mapping business to fund the transaction, Nokia secured access to Bell Labs’ core patent portfolio, effectively transforming itself into an end-to-end communications infrastructure titan spanning IP routing, fixed networks, and optical transmission.
The Optical Transition (2024): Nokia deployed $2.3 billion—representing nearly its entire annual profit—to acquire Silicon Valley optical communications specialist Infinera. The high-stakes acquisition targeted a critical architectural shift in the AI hardware supply chain: the transition from GPU bottlenecks to connectivity bottlenecks.
Solving the AI Interconnect Bottleneck
While the global AI buildout from 2023 through 2024 was severely constrained by raw GPU supply, the scaling of massive AI clusters in 2025 and 2026 exposed a severe data transmission bottleneck. As tens of thousands of cluster chips exchange high-frequency data simultaneously, standard copper interconnects create processing latencies. The industry solution has shifted entirely to optical transmission.
AI Industry Bottleneck Evolution:
[2023-2024: GPU Compute Constraints] ──> [2025-2026: Optical Interconnect & Speed Constraints]
Infinera’s core value lies in its vertically integrated capabilities; it is one of fewer than five companies globally that designs and fabricates its own optoelectronic semiconductors and photonic integrated chips. The acquisition propelled Nokia to the number-two position in the global optical transmission equipment market, positioning it directly behind Huawei. With Huawei facing ongoing Western regulatory restrictions and third-place Ciena Corp. approaching absolute production capacity limits, Nokia has captured a highly lucrative market vacuum.
Furthermore, the Infinera integration granted Nokia direct tier-one supplier status with major hyperscalers, including Google, Microsoft, and Meta. Nokia's optical networking business grew 19% year-over-year, capturing a 21% share of the global optical networking market, alongside a dominant 35% global market share in next-generation XGS-PON fiber technology. Nine of the top ten global cloud service providers have integrated Nokia's architecture. By Q1 2026, Nokia’s optical network division generated €821 million in quarterly revenue—a 20% year-over-year increase—while its operating profit jumped 54%.
This structural pivot attracted institutional validation from AI bellwether Nvidia Corp., which executed a $1 billion investment in Nokia. Nvidia’s recent 13F filings reveal a 2.9% equity stake in the Finnish telecom firm, an investment that has more than doubled in less than eight months even as Nvidia liquidated positions in other high-profile chip design firms.
The Global Optical Phenomenon: The Rise of 'Yi Zhongtian'
The explosive re-rating of optical communications extends far beyond European markets, deeply impacting China's domestic equities. In the A-share market, a trio of high-performance optical module manufacturers—Zhongji Xuchuang (InnoLight Technology), Xinyisheng (New Easun), and Tianfu Communication—collectively known by traders as "Yi Zhongtian," saw their combined market capitalization surpass 2 trillion yuan, eclipsing traditional heavyweight Kweichow Moutai Co.
InnoLight Technology, commanding a 50% global market share in high-end 800G and 1.6T optical modules, recorded a staggering 192% year-over-year increase in Q1 revenue to 19.496 billion yuan, while its net profit skyrocketed 262% to 5.735 billion yuan. The firm's institutional order book is fully committed through 2028. The aggregate market cap of the broader Co-Packaged Optics (CPO) sector has breached 3.3 trillion yuan, a tenfold increase from the sector's baseline capitalization at the launch of ChatGPT. Market intelligence from TrendForce projects the global AI optical module sector will grow 57% year-over-year, scaling from $16.5 billion to $26 billion.
Macro Valuation Realities vs. AI-RAN Futures
Despite the capital market euphoria, Nokia’s financial statements require realistic appraisal. The high-growth optical networking division generated €821 million in Q1, representing just 18% of the group's total revenue mix. The vast majority of Nokia's baseline income remains tethered to legacy mobile infrastructure and traditional telecom carrier networks—a global Radio Access Network (RAN) market projected to grow at a stagnant compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of just 1% over the next five years.
Consequently, Nokia's elevated 54 P/E ratio represents a massive speculative bet on the commercialization of AI-RAN technology. In tandem with Nvidia, Nokia is attempting to inject AI computing platforms directly into global communication networks, effectively transforming millions of cell towers into localized, distributed AI computing nodes.
Ultimately, Nokia's parity with Xiaomi illustrates two divergent corporate trajectories. While Xiaomi continues to wage a high-capital war in the consumer-facing market (To-C) via smartphones and electric vehicles, Nokia has successfully withdrawn from the brand-centric spotlight to anchor the invisible foundation of the global AI economy. In the current capital cycle, investment liquidity is flowing away from edge terminals and directly into hardware infrastructure, chips, and optical interconnects.






