Nokia Rolls Out Autonomous AI Agents for Fixed Networks as Stock Pauses After 139% Surge
13.05.2026 - 01:16:23 | boerse-global.de
Artificial intelligence is moving beyond the chatbot screen and into the physical plumbing of global connectivity. Nokia announced on Tuesday a new generation of autonomous AI agents embedded in its fixed-network platforms Altiplano, Corteca and Broadband Easy, targeting a market that research firms estimate will reach $6.2 billion by 2030. The Finnish equipment maker is betting that telecom operators will embrace AI capable of making independent decisions rather than just answering queries.
The technology draws on data from more than 600 million broadband lines Nokia has already deployed. The company set specific performance targets: first-contact resolution rates above 50% at the helpdesk, network fault classification within five minutes, and a 50% reduction in return visits to construction sites and households. Field technicians receive real-time support through voice commands and image analysis, while a computer-vision system validates work quality and builds a digital twin of the fiber network.
"We solve problems before the customer even notices them," said Sandy Motley, president of Nokia’s fixed networks division, in a statement that underscored the preventative ambition of the move.
Open architecture as a differentiator
A deliberate design principle behind the AI agents is vendor neutrality. Operators retain full control over their data and can choose which large language model best suits their operations, plugging in external services as needed. That approach addresses a persistent fear among telecom carriers: being locked into proprietary systems that create long-term dependencies.
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According to a survey by analyst firm Omdia, 48% of network operators see the most immediate AI benefit in customer experience, but the industry’s longer-term expectation centers on fully automated network management. Nokia’s open architecture positions it to capture both use cases.
Strong rally, then profit-taking
Investors reacted to the announcement with a sell-off that wiped out some of the stock’s recent eye-popping gains. Nokia shares fell roughly 5% to €11.12, while another report pegged the decline at 4.7% with the stock at €11.18. The divergence reflects intraday volatility rather than a fundamental disagreement: the stock had hit a fresh 52-week high of €11.73 just the day before.
The pullback is modest in context. Nokia shares have surged around 139% over the past twelve months, with nearly 33% of that advance concentrated in the last 30 days alone. A classic "buy the rumor, sell the news" pattern appears to be at play as some investors lock in profits.
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Analysts remain broadly bullish. JPMorgan recently lifted its price target from €6.90 to €12.00 with an "Overweight" rating. Morgan Stanley followed with a €11.00 target, and Argus upgraded Nokia to "Buy" after the first-quarter report, explicitly citing AI demand as a catalyst.
Whether the operational AI story translates into sustained commercial traction will hinge on concrete contract wins with telecom operators. So far Nokia has not disclosed any new agreements tied to the autonomous agent rollout.
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