Nokia has taken one of the most consequential strategic turns in its modern history, confirming that it will carve out its artificial-intelligence and data-centre operations into a standalone business. The move follows a landmark $1 billion investment from Nvidia, giving the US chipmaker a meaningful equity stake and signalling a deepening partnership at a time when AI infrastructure has become the defining battleground of the global technology economy.
For Nokia, the message is unambiguous: the era of relying primarily on mobile-network equipment is coming to an end. With 5G investment slowing, operator capex tightening and growth prospects in radio access networks fading, the Finnish group is repositioning itself toward the fast-expanding world of AI-native networks. Hyperscalers, cloud providers and AI-compute companies are entering their biggest investment cycle in decades — and Nokia wants to be at the centre of it.
Under the restructuring, which will take effect in early 2026, the company will operate two core divisions. The newly created Network Infrastructure unit will house optical networks, IP networking, broadband and the company’s AI-related platforms and data-centre technologies. The legacy mobile-networks division will be streamlined around 5G and 6G radio, but without the expectation that it will remain the primary engine of growth. A smaller sovereign-focused division, Nokia Defense, will be placed in a separate incubation category to develop secure government and national-security infrastructure.
The decision comes after months of internal debate, at a time when Nokia faces intensifying competitive and geopolitical pressure. Ericsson’s recovery, Huawei’s resilience in non-Western markets, and European operators’ muted spending plans have placed Nokia’s traditional networks business under strain. Against that backdrop, the AI-infrastructure boom offers a more compelling runway. Nvidia is betting that Nokia can become a major supplier of high-capacity networking fabrics, advanced optical-transport systems and data-centre interconnects — technologies that are essential as AI-training clusters scale rapidly.
Markets initially welcomed the pivot. Nokia’s share price surged after the Nvidia announcement, touching levels last seen nearly a decade ago. But as details of the reorganisation became clearer, some of those gains faded. Investors are now weighing the ambition of the strategy against its execution risk. Splitting the business adds complexity, and the path to monetising AI-native networking depends on long sales cycles and heavy upfront investment. Hyperscale AI clusters, sovereign cloud platforms and defence-grade networks all require long contracting processes.
Still, the strategic rationale is difficult to ignore. AI workloads are expanding far faster than today’s networks can accommodate. Massive increases in data throughput, ultra-low-latency connectivity and energy-efficient transport systems are becoming central to the competitive advantage of AI developers. Nokia believes that its IP-routing technologies, fibre-optical platforms and next-generation data-centre interconnects are uniquely positioned to meet this demand — particularly as Europe accelerates its digital-infrastructure agenda. (Related analysis: Europe’s digital competitiveness strategy)
The pivot is not merely technological but geopolitical. Western governments are increasingly emphasising trusted, sovereign-aligned suppliers for critical infrastructure. As EU and US policymakers become more wary of dependency on Chinese vendors, Nokia’s alignment with Nvidia strengthens its position as a Western alternative capable of supporting major AI, cloud and national-security projects. This geopolitical momentum may prove as important as the commercial fundamentals. Relevant context: Europe’s tech-security landscape.
Financially, Nokia is targeting annual operating profit of €2.7bn–€3.2bn by 2028, up from roughly €2bn today. Much of that upside is expected to come from the Network Infrastructure division — the business now most closely tied to the AI opportunity. Executives acknowledge that restructuring costs will rise over the next two years, but insist that long-term margin expansion will justify the transition. This mirrors the broader trend of AI-driven transformation across Europe’s technology sector. (In-depth: Europe’s AI-investment boom)
There are material risks. Global demand for AI infrastructure remains strong but highly concentrated, with only a few large customers driving the majority of spending. Any slowdown in AI-cluster investment, regulatory intervention, or shifts in architecture could undermine Nokia’s assumptions. The company must also navigate its withdrawal from several non-core segments — including fixed wireless access, microwave radio and certain site-implementation units — which it now considers commercially peripheral. Similar challenges have emerged across Europe’s telecom-equipment sector, where companies are pivoting away from commodity hardware into software-driven and cloud-native models. (More: European telecoms restructuring trends)
Yet the direction of travel is clear. Nokia is no longer positioning itself as a traditional telecom-equipment manufacturer adapting to AI; it is reinventing itself as a foundational supplier of the networks that AI requires. The Nvidia partnership is more than an investment — it is a strategic endorsement that could reshape Nokia’s trajectory for the next decade. The company now has a narrative that investors can rally around: Nokia wants to build the networking backbone of the AI age, and it is reorganising itself to do exactly that.
For Europe’s broader industrial landscape, the move underscores how deeply AI is reshaping corporate strategy. As the region intensifies its push for technological sovereignty, Nokia’s bold restructuring may prove a template for other legacy players seeking to reposition their businesses around the next wave of digital infrastructure. Related coverage: Europe’s strategic shift toward cloud and AI infrastructure.
