This Former Tech Giant Could Make a MAJOR a Turnaround

A quick review of the stocks contained in my $100,000 Real-Money Portfolio may give the impression that I'm a big fan of turnaround plays.

That's actually not the case.

Companies like Ford (NYSE: F) are doing very well, and simply suffer from a low valuation assigned to its business. Alcoa (NYSE: AA), trading at more than 75% off it's five-year high, is in fine operational shape, but at the bottom of its cycle. Hasbro (NYSE: HAS) is being punished because it lacks "timeliness," because current initiatives won't fully pay off until 2013 and 2014.

You get the idea...

Indeed, there are ample other sources for investors to find solid turnaround ideas. It's simply not the over-arching theme of this portfolio. But I'm making an exception for my newest pick. It's a once-great company that is struggling for relevance. Its management has had to make a series of very tough decisions, most of which have yet to truly pay off. And there is the real possibility that a hoped-for turnaround will simply never take root. Shares have roughly 25% downside if the business doesn't turn around. But the upside is so significant, and early signals from the turnaround are sufficiently promising, that I need to add it to the portfolio now -- before sentiment around the company changes.

I am talking about Nokia (NYSE: NOK), which was the world's dominant maker of cell phones long before Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) entered the scene.

I have written about Nokia several times before, and for the sake of brevity in this article, I ask you to review what I have previously covered...

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Back in November, I explained why short-sellers thought Nokia was headed for further trouble. In fact, the cumulative short position has risen further since then to a recent 216 million shares, or 6% of the float.

In this article, published six weeks ago, I started to see Nokia in a more bullish light, noting that a symbiotic relationship with Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) was finally looking more promising.

Another tough month
Fast-forward to last week, where Nokia made a series of presentations at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. In a nutshell, Nokia discussed its new phone strategy in greater detail. The Lumia phones will target four slices of the market, from the low-end 610 model, to the high-end 900 model. (Nokia also revealed a new high-end phone using its legacy Symbian software with features such as a 41 mega-pixel camera, which analysts quickly deemed irrelevant.)

Going into the event, shares surged to $5.65 on an intra-day basis on February 21, the highest level in nearly a month. Investors were bracing for a game-changing announcement, and they didn't get one. Shares are now back close to $5, not far from the $4.50 lows seen in mid-December.