Microsoft Buying Nokia's Devices and Phone Business for $7 Billion
Looking to strengthen hardware business, Microsoft buying Nokia's phone unit.
Sept. 3, 2013 -- After years of a close mobile phone alliance, Microsoft has thrown down the cash to buy most of Nokia. With the transaction, Microsoft will buy Nokia's Devices and Services business for 3.79 billion euros (nearly $5 billion) and will pay 1.65 billion euros (about $2.17 billion) to license Nokia's patents, totaling 5.44 billion euros, or $7.17 billion.
"We have some of the best products in the industry, but we need more combined muscle to truly breakthrough with consumers," Elop said at a news conference this morning at Nokia's headquarters in Finland. "With this transaction we can accelerate our current movement and gain a stronger financial backing to be more successful in the mobile market."
The two companies are not a surprising pairing because Nokia has been exclusively selling Windows Phone smartphones since 2012. Its line of Lumia smartphones have been hallmark Windows Phone devices for Microsoft.
On the flip side, Microsoft has also begun to position itself away from being strictly a software company and more of a software and hardware company. The company last year released its own Surface family of tablets, rather than relying on their hardware vendors.
"Microsoft has said that it is transitioning from a software company to a 'devices and services' company," Avi Greengart, research director of consumer devices at Current Analysis, told ABC News. "If introducing a tablet that competes directly with other Windows licensees was not proof enough, buying Nokia's hardware division certainly brings the point home."
While it is too early for Nokia and Microsoft to talk about specific future products, Elop said the partnership will help "increase share through faster innovation and better products and unified branding and marketing."
While Microsoft says that it would still like to work with other phone makers, including Samsung and HTC, the move will likely push other smartphone makers who were making Windows Phones out of the market.
"Whatever flagging support Windows Phone had from Samsung and HTC will now either be further jeopardized or cut off," Ross Rubin, principal analyst for Rectile Research, told ABC News.
"As Nokia was willing to exclusively work with Microsoft, the two became such close partners that acquisition enabled less friction. Nokia was already, for all intents and purposes, Microsoft's handset vendor."
The Nokia acquisition is expected to close in the first quarter in 2014.