Welcome to our dedicated page for Nokia SEC filings (Ticker: NOK), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Nokia Corporation’s SEC filings document its status as a foreign private issuer and its formal disclosures to U.S. markets through Form 6-K reports. The filing record includes stock exchange releases covering manager share transactions, share-based incentive arrangements, transfers of Nokia’s own shares and governance actions approved by corporate bodies.
Recent filings also describe Annual General Meeting resolutions, adoption of financial statements, remuneration reporting, board authorizations for asset distributions and dividend-related decisions. For Nokia, these regulatory documents connect capital structure, insider and manager transaction reporting, shareholder approvals, board authority and recurring governance disclosures to its global connectivity business across fixed, mobile and transport networks.
Nokia Corporation has published its Nokia in 2025 Annual Report and filed its Annual Report on Form 20-F for 2025 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The report includes audited financial statements, the Board of Directors’ annual review, a Sustainability Statement, Corporate Governance Statement and Remuneration Report.
The financial statements are also available in XHTML under European Single Electronic Format (ESEF) rules, with consolidated figures tagged in iXBRL. Deloitte Oy provided a reasonable-assurance auditor’s report on the ESEF financial statements and limited assurance on the Sustainability Statement, which follows CSRD, European sustainability reporting standards and EU Taxonomy Article 8.
Nokia Corporation filed its 2025 annual report, showing net sales of EUR 19 889 million, around 3% growth, and about EUR 2 billion in comparable operating profit with EUR 1.5 billion of free cash flow. R&D spending reached EUR 4.9 billion, and total greenhouse gas emissions fell 27% from a 2019 base year.
The company closed its EUR 2.5 billion acquisition of Infinera to scale Optical Networks and deepen reach with AI & Cloud customers, and NVIDIA agreed to invest USD 1 billion as part of a strategic AI-RAN partnership. Orders from AI & Cloud customers totaled EUR 2.4 billion in 2025.
Nokia introduced a new AI-focused strategy, simplified into two operating segments—Network Infrastructure and Mobile Infrastructure—from 1 January 2026, and targets EUR 2.0–2.5 billion of comparable operating profit in 2026. The Board proposes authority to distribute up to EUR 0.14 per share, with 5 742 239 696 shares outstanding at year-end.
Nokia Corporation reported that investment firm FMR LLC has crossed a key ownership threshold in the company. As of 2 March 2026, FMR LLC’s indirect holdings reached 5.04% of Nokia’s shares and 4.83% of its voting rights.
Nokia has 5,742,239,696 shares outstanding, each carrying one vote. The notification was made under Chapter 9 of the Finnish Securities Market Act, which requires disclosure when major shareholders pass specified ownership levels.
Nokia Corporation filed a Form 6-K detailing share purchases by three senior managers under EU Market Abuse Regulation. On 19 February 2026, David Heard acquired 251 shares, Louise Fisk acquired 174 shares, and Raghav Sahgal acquired 2,391 shares on NASDAQ Helsinki at a unit price of 6.3015 per share.
Each transaction is reported as an initial notification and the trades are categorized as acquisitions of Nokia shares, highlighting direct equity exposure for these managers.
Nokia Corporation filed a Form 6-K detailing share transactions by senior manager David Heard under EU Market Abuse Regulation. On 16 February 2026, Heard executed multiple market disposals of Nokia shares across several trading venues.
The transactions totaled 275,000 shares of Nokia stock (ISIN FI0009000681) at a total volume‑weighted average price of €5.9457 per share. Individual trades were carried out on venues including AQEA, BATF, BEUP, MSIP, UBSY and XTXE.
Nokia Corporation filed a Form 6-K outlining two equity-related actions. First, senior manager David Heard received a share-based incentive of 352,752 Nokia shares, recorded as a transaction outside a trading venue under the EU Market Abuse Regulation.
Second, Nokia transferred 2,622,652 own shares held by the company, without consideration, to participants in its equity-based incentive plans, based on a prior Board resolution. After this transfer, Nokia held 139,291,855 own shares, clarifying the impact of incentive settlements on its treasury share balance.
Nokia Corporation has called its Annual General Meeting for 9 April 2026 in Helsinki, with shareholders able to attend in person or vote in advance. The agenda covers approval of 2025 accounts, discharge of directors and adoption of the 2025 remuneration report.
The Board proposes that no dividend be decided directly at the meeting. Instead, it seeks authorization to distribute up to EUR 0.14 per share in total as dividend and/or from the reserve for invested unrestricted equity, potentially in four installments between 2026 and early 2027.
The Board also asks for two major authorizations: to repurchase up to 550 million shares, and to issue up to 550 million shares or share-linked rights, each less than 10% of Nokia’s 5,742,239,696 shares and effective until 8 October 2027. Routine items include Board elections, auditor and sustainability assurer appointments, and detailed participation instructions for Finnish, nominee-registered and ADR holders.
Nokia Corporation filed a Form 6-K detailing manager transactions under EU Market Abuse rules. Board member Timo Ihamuotila acquired a total of 100 000 Nokia shares on 30 January 2026 across several trading venues.
The transactions were executed at a total volume weighted average price of 5,3740 EUR per share, with individual trades reported on venues including NASDAQ Helsinki and multiple European multilateral trading facilities.
Nokia Corporation is reorganizing its business from 1 January 2026 into three operating segments – Network Infrastructure, Mobile Infrastructure and Portfolio Businesses – plus Group Common and Other, and has published recast comparative segment figures for 2025 and 2024.
Under the new structure, 2025 net sales were EUR 7,646 million for Network Infrastructure and EUR 11,409 million for Mobile Infrastructure, compared with EUR 6,285 million and EUR 12,191 million respectively in 2024. Portfolio Businesses generated 2025 net sales of EUR 845 million versus EUR 717 million in 2024. Network Infrastructure delivered a 2025 operating profit of EUR 770 million with a 10.1% operating margin, while Mobile Infrastructure reported EUR 1,525 million operating profit and a 13.4% margin. Portfolio Businesses remained loss-making with a 2025 operating loss of EUR 90 million.
The company notes that reported or comparable results for the Nokia Group are unchanged by this new reporting structure, which is intended to align with its AI-era connectivity strategy and highlight Network Infrastructure as a growth segment.