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Ericsson announces profit boost in wake of 5G rollout

Swedish telecoms giant Ericsson announced increased annual profits on Friday, largely thanks to the rollout of 5G networks.

Ericsson announces profit boost in wake of 5G rollout
Ericsson's headquarters in Sweden. Photo: Maja Suslin/TT

However the company also expressed worries it could suffer reprisals from China after its home country banned the use of competitor Huawei's equipment in the next generation of phone networks.

“The pandemic has fast forwarded the digitalization of societies, including remote working, by months if not years… We see more signs that countries and enterprises see 5G as a key access technology,” Ericsson CEO Börje Ekholm said in a comment to the annual results.

Ericsson, one of the leaders in 5G equipment, reported an annual net profit of 17.5 billion Swedish kronor ($2.1 billion, 1.7 billion euros).

This can be compared to a 2.2 billion kronor profit the previous year, though in 2019 the company was also burdened by settlements in a US corruption probe.

For 2020, turnover increased 2.0 percent to 232 billion kronor, beating analyst expectations.
 
The gross margin, excluding restructuring costs, which is the equipment makers preferred indicator of profitability, rose 3.1 percentage points to 40.6 percent.
 

Ericsson shares traded up more than six percent on the Stockholm stock exchange after the results.

To date, Ericsson has signed 127 commercial 5G contracts with operators around the world, for 79 operational networks, the group said.

Together with China's Huawei and Finland's Nokia, they account for the majority of the world market for 5G network equipment.

However, Sweden, the birthplace of Ericsson, announced in October that it was banning new equipment from Huawei and ZTE, both from China, from its new 5G telecoms network, citing national security concerns.

The moved prompted protests from Beijing. Sweden was the second European country to explicitly ban Huawei after the UK did so in July.

With some countries banning Huawei, analysts say its Nordic competitors stand to benefit, but Ericsson's CEO have also voiced concerns about reprisals targeting its Chinese operations, Ericsson's second largest after the US.

In the annual report, the company listed as a “risk” that the actions of Sweden could “lead to measures taken by China that are targeted at the economic interests of Sweden and Swedish industry, including those of Ericsson”.

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MONEY

Three ways Sweden’s slashed interest rate will boost your finances

Sweden's central bank, the Riksbank, has lowered the policy rate for the first time in eight years. How could this affect the finances of those of us living in Sweden?

Three ways Sweden's slashed interest rate will boost your finances

Lower mortgage rates

The policy rate is not the same as the interest rate on your mortgage, although they are linked. In a policy rate prognosis from March, the bank predicted that the policy rate could drop to as low as 2.75 percent by the end of 2025, a drop of 1.25 percentage points since the beginning of 2024.

If mortgage rates drop by the same amount, you could expect a drop in the monthly cost of a 3 million kronor mortgage of around 3,000 kronor a month, not including the tax rebate for interest costs.

Higher property prices

As mortgage rates get lower, the housing market is likely to improve, as buyers know their monthly costs aren’t going to skyrocket due to ever-rising interest rates.

If you already own a home and you’re planning on buying and selling at the same time in the market, this will affect you less, as the price of your new home will most likely go up at the same rate as the price of your old home, but this is good news for anyone planning on selling.

It’s worse news for first-time buyers, who will have to save a larger deposit as prices go up, but on the other hand they’ll get lower mortgage rates and a more stable policy rate makes it easier to plan ahead for the future without being surprised by ever-increasing rates.

A stronger Swedish economy

The Riksbank’s decision to lower the interest rate is proof that the bank believes inflation is over – for now at least. This means that we can expect to see inflation remain at a more stable level, and we’re unlikely to see anything close to the ten percent inflation we saw at the end of 2022.

Lower inflation means that Swedish monetary policy won’t need to be as cautious or restrictive in the future, as the government and the central bank no longer need to put all their efforts into fighting inflation.

That’s not to say that authorities will start stimulating the economy just yet – they’re likely to proceed with caution to make sure inflation really is down for the long-term – but Thursday’s interest rate announcement indicates that the “economic winter” Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson warned of in September last year could be drawing to a close.

What about the weak krona?

In the short term, the value of the krona is likely to worsen somewhat, as the central bank has lowered Sweden’s interest rate ahead of other major central banks. The krona weakened slightly after the bank’s announcement on Thursday, dropping 8 öre in value against the dollar and 7 öre against the euro.

This is good news for people with income in other currencies, but bad news for those of us who are paid in kronor.

Having said that, a stronger Swedish economy is good news for the value of the krona in the long term, although it’s difficult to predict when the krona will start to gain in value and by how much.

At the end of last year, Riksbank governor Erik Thedéen described the krona as “undervalued”, and underlined the importance of having strong foundations in the Swedish economy.

“The Swedish economy is, at its foundations, well-managed, and sooner or later this will lead to a stronger exchange rate,” he said. “Sweden has strong finances, a well-educated labour force, responsible salaries and a good underlying level of competition.”

“As anyone who has tried to predict the exchange rate knows, it’s genuinely difficult to say exactly when it will go up and by how much, but it can also happen quickly when the trend is broken and the krona starts to gain in value.”

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