Ericsson lags profit expectations as AI demand drives up chip bill

Ericsson

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Sweden's Ericsson reported a first-quarter core profit that slightly missed market expectations on Friday, citing increasing chip costs caused by artificial intelligence demand and a sales slowdown in North America.

The network equipment maker is facing rising input costs partially due to high demand for AI technology ​that is ⁠driving up prices of semiconductors, CEO Börje Ekholm said in a statement.

"We ⁠are working together with our suppliers to mitigate this. But also, we will need to work with our customers to share the burden on this," finance ​chief Lars Sandström added in an interview with Reuters.

Ericsson reported an adjusted operating profit of 5.2 billion Swedish crowns ($566 million), excluding restructuring charges, for the ​first quarter of 2026. Analysts polled by Infront were expecting ⁠5.4 billion crowns on average.

The company's shares were down 1.6% in early Stockholm trading.

Ericsson, ⁠one of the main Western suppliers of network equipment alongside Finland's Nokia, has been betting heavily on the ‌U.S. market even as transatlantic ties ​have become strained under President Donald Trump's rule.

The Swedish group has significant U.S. exposure especially after winning a $14 ⁠billion deal with operator AT&T in 2023, which could help outweigh slower telecoms investments in ‌other markets.

Sandström said sales in North America fell by a ​mid-single-digit percentage ‌in the quarter, compared to a strong year-ago period that was boosted by tariff-related demand. Underlying ‌market conditions in the region remain solid, he ⁠added.

The group's ⁠quarterly net sales fell 10% from a year ago to 49.3 billion crowns, below an Infront poll estimate of 50.7 billion crowns.

In a note to investors, J.P. Morgan said the results were "soft to in-line" and warned there could be a read-across effect ​on Nokia's shares due to the weakness reported in North America. Nokia fell 1.5% in ⁠early Helsinki trading.

($1 = ‌9.1869 Swedish crowns)

(Reporting by Gianluca Lo Nostro and ​Agnieszka ‌Olenska in Gdansk; Editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)

Copyright (2026) Thomson Reuters.

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