Announcing their third quarter financial results, Nokia and Ericsson were in a similar pattern to that of Q2, with the former announcing generally strong figures, while Ericsson disappointed the markets, despite some good indicators along with the bad. However, this time Nokia also failed to excite shareholders, who were worried about poor performance in technology licensing and in the Cloud and Networks unit. Nokia reported a 16% year-on-year rise in sales, though this was only 6% on a constant currency basis, to more than €6.2bn ($6.1bn). Net profit was up 22% to €428m ($419m). Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark focused heavily on the enterprise and private networks markets, as the firm’s chief source of growth, though it was the traditional IP…