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This article was published on January 26, 2012

Microsoft paid Nokia $250 million for its use of Windows Phone platform


Microsoft paid Nokia $250 million for its use of Windows Phone platform

Finnish mobile giant Nokia today released its fourth quarter financial results, posting a €1.07 billion ($1.4 billion) loss as sales declined by 21% year on year with smartphone sales and mobile sales down 31% and 1% respectively.

Whilst it shows Nokia still has a lot of work to do, it sold 19.6 million smartphones and 93.9 million mobile devices, meaning that over the quarter, sales were up 17% and 5% respectively on the last quarter.

In its statement, Nokia also revealed the amount that it receives from Microsoft for its utilisation of the Windows Phone platform, acknowledging that the Redmond-based company paid it $250 million in “support payments” over the last quarter:

Our broad strategic agreement with Microsoft includes platform support payments from Microsoft to us as well as software royalty payments from us to Microsoft.  In the fourth quarter 2011, we received the first quarterly platform support payment of USD 250 million (EUR 180 million).  We have a competitive software royalty structure, which includes minimum software royalty commitments. Over the life of the agreement, both the platform support payments and the minimum software royalty commitments are expected to measure in the billions of US Dollars.

The deal was signed in February 2011, with Nokia announcing a “broad strategic partnership” with Microsoft that combined “the respective strengths” of the two companies and would help build “a new global mobile ecosystem.”

It is likely that some of the payments were to help subsidise Nokia’s impressive Lumia 800 marketing campaigns, which included a spectacular 3D light show on the banks of London’s River Thames and a sustained television advertising push.

It is not known if the payments are ongoing or it was a one-off injection, given Nokia’s decision to launch its new devices in the fourth quarter of 2011.

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