Nokia Deploys AI Agents to Automate Networks as Stock Pulls Back From Record High
11.06.2026 - 16:23:06 | boerse-global.de
Nokia is rolling out an ambitious artificial intelligence strategy for its network management business just as the stock gives back some of the monster gains that have piled up since January. The Finnish telecom equipment maker has introduced a new AI framework for its Network Services Platform, adding autonomous agents that can monitor and troubleshoot IP networks without constant human oversight. The technology arrives at a delicate moment: shares have slid roughly 18-19% over the past week from an all-time high of €14.97 set in early June, even as the year-to-date advance stands at a stunning 108-110%.
The core of the announcement is a suite of AI agents that operate within strict security and policy boundaries, relying on real-time network data to make decisions. Nokia specifically designed these agents to tackle the trust hurdle that often holds back artificial intelligence in production telecom environments. The first practical application will be a digital assistant for troubleshooting, capable of pinpointing fault causes far faster than manual methods. It communicates with other software via the Model Context Protocol, and Nokia plans to make the tool commercially available by the end of 2026.
Alongside the AI agents, Nokia unveiled the Deepfield Genome Shield, a cybersecurity product aimed at service providers, hosting firms and cloud operators. The system automates DDoS protection by proactively blocking attacks launched from compromised residential devices — a botnet category that, according to the company, encompasses an estimated 200 million gadgets worldwide.
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The AI push is already gaining traction in Asia. Nokia has secured a multi-year contract with Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison to upgrade a large portion of the Indonesian carrier’s network to 5G over the next three and a half years. In a separate initiative announced on June 9, Nokia is partnering with Nvidia and Indosat to test AI-enhanced radio access networks in the country. Field trials for the AI-RAN technology are expected to begin before the end of this year.
The company is also reshuffling its intellectual property holdings. More than 1,000 patents from Nokia’s own labs and from the Alcatel-Lucent portfolio have been transferred to a newly formed entity called LinkConnect Innovations. The move aims to boost revenue from patent licensing by focusing on assets outside Nokia’s core operating business.
On the charts, the stock recently traded in the €11.60-€11.74 range, a steep drop from the June peak that leaves the shares roughly 23% below that record. Support sits at the 50-day moving average of €10.82, a level Nokia will need to defend to keep the uptrend intact. The commercial rollout of the new AI products in 2026 provides a clear operational milestone, though near-term momentum will depend on how quickly telecom operators adopt the autonomous tools and translate them into measurable efficiency gains.
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