Nokia Corp (NOK) is putting serious money where its mouth is when it comes to American manufacturing. The Finnish telecom giant announced it's earmarking $4 billion for US research and manufacturing operations, collaborating with the Trump administration to accelerate innovation in AI-ready networking technologies. We're talking mobile networks, fixed access, IP systems, optical infrastructure, and data center connectivity.
The stock climbed following the announcement, which makes sense when you're talking about this kind of commitment.
This isn't Nokia starting from scratch, either. The company already committed $2.3 billion to US manufacturing, R&D, and AI connectivity through its acquisition of Infinera. That deal came with its own sweetener: Infinera had separately secured $456 million in CHIPS Act incentives to support two US facilities. Now Nokia is layering another $4 billion on top of that foundation.
Here's how the money breaks down. About $3.5 billion will flow into US research and development, strengthening Nokia's push into next-generation connectivity and AI infrastructure across commercial and defense networks. The remaining $500 million goes toward manufacturing capital expenditures and additional R&D facilities in Texas, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
The strategy deepens Nokia's AI-optimized networking portfolio while reinforcing its industry-leading research capabilities across automation, quantum-safe networks, semiconductor manufacturing and testing, advanced packaging, and next-generation material science. It's extending the innovation legacy of Nokia Bell Labs in New Jersey, which has been a research powerhouse for decades.
Nokia's market cap sits around $33 billion these days, and the stock has gained 33% year-to-date as the company works through strategic restructuring and partnerships designed to unlock value.
Restructuring for the AI Era
Nokia is fundamentally reshaping its business to capture growth in AI-driven and software-centric networks, especially as demand for traditional 5G infrastructure cools off. Starting January 1, 2026, the company will streamline operations into two core divisions: Network Infrastructure and Mobile Infrastructure.
The restructuring includes new profitability and cash-flow targets running through 2028, cuts to centralized costs, and a move to shift slower-growth assets into a separate Portfolio Businesses unit. The goal is pretty straightforward: strengthen returns and focus resources on higher-growth opportunities.
Nokia is also expanding initiatives around AI, cloud computing, and defense-grade secure connectivity. That positioning matters as Western governments increasingly prioritize domestic suppliers for sensitive infrastructure projects, creating opportunities for trusted vendors like Nokia.
Price Action: NOK shares were trading higher by 0.85% to $5.920 at last check Friday.