Helsinki, Feb 19, 2026, 14:36 EET — Regular session
- Nokia shares edged up roughly 0.4% in Helsinki after the company highlighted a live commercial 5G core service operating as software on AWS.
- The company touted the launch as evidence that its subscription-based “core” is production-ready.
- Attention shifts to early-March industry events and, further out, Nokia’s April results for signs of continued momentum.
Nokia shares edged up 0.45% to 6.288 euros in Helsinki on Thursday, after the Finnish telecom equipment maker announced that Belgium’s Citymesh has launched what it’s billing as the world’s first commercial mobile service running on 5G Core provided as software-as-a-service. (Investing)
Timing is key here—carriers remain cautious with their budgets, so suppliers such as Nokia are after more predictable software revenue to ride out the ups and downs. A real, revenue-generating network client gives suppliers a solid example, shifting a “pilot” from hype to something procurement teams might actually back.
The 5G “core” runs the show in a mobile network—managing sessions, directing traffic, handling subscriber features. Nokia’s angle: operators can shift that core to a public cloud on a subscription plan, sidestepping heavy hardware investments right out of the gate.
Nokia announced that Citymesh is deploying Nokia’s Core SaaS for Business over Amazon Web Services, rolling it out across enterprise-focused locations—airports, hospitals, first responders, and transport hubs are on the list. The setup is also the backbone for a new mobile plan targeting freelancers and small firms. Details are set for release at MWC Barcelona, scheduled March 2-5. (Nokia Corporation | Nokia)
Citymesh CTO Robin Leblon called it “a major milestone” to launch the world’s first commercial 5G Core SaaS service, according to the statement. Leblon said the new setup should let Citymesh “scale faster” while reducing its upfront investment. (Nokia Corporation | Nokia)
Kal De, Nokia’s senior vice president for core software product and engineering, described “telecom SaaS” as nothing less than a “paradigm shift.” He pointed to the Citymesh rollout as evidence that 5G Core SaaS had gone “from concept to production-ready reality.” AWS executive Fabio Cerone added that the partnership has the potential to simplify both deployment and lifecycle management for telecom providers. (Nokia Corporation | Nokia)
Nokia’s ADR finished Wednesday at $7.43 in the U.S., rising 1.78% for the day. The stock added to its recent winning streak as the broader market also showed strength. (MarketWatch)
Nokia is pushing further into cloud and AI-related demand as spending on mobile networks stays patchy, contending with the likes of Ericsson in a market where contract wins—or losses—can move sentiment in a hurry. (Reuters)
The downside’s not hard to picture here. Operators might keep punting those major core upgrades, or potential buyers could hesitate to put critical network functions on public cloud—citing costs, security, or regulatory headaches. In that case, “SaaS core” risks staying niche instead of becoming a real volume engine, and the stock could just slide back into its typical cycle.
Looking ahead to the next week, investors are zeroed in on customer reaction to Nokia’s cloud core strategy as early-March industry events approach. Nokia has its “Nokia in 2025” annual report coming in the week beginning March 2, then the company convenes its annual general meeting April 9, with Q1 numbers due April 23. (Nokia Corporation | Nokia)