By Tarmo Virki

Analysts had forecast an 8-percent fall in the handset market in 2009, and only last month Nokia's own view was that it would dip 5 percent.

"It is interesting that they lower guidance for 2009 already now after their assessment in December. It shows how fast things have worsened in the past month," said Johan Strandberg at SEB Asset Management.

"That's what's driving the stock," said Richard Windsor, technology specialist at Nomura Securities.

Shares in Nokia slid more than 8 percent to their lowest level since mid-2004, souring the mood across Europe's bourses, before cutting losses slightly to trade down 6.1 percent to 9.61 euros at 1223 GMT (7:23 a.m. EST).

Nokia's said its underlying fourth-quarter earnings per share were 0.26 euros, missing the average forecast of 0.30 euros in a Reuters poll, but within the wide range of estimates.

PROFITABILITY UNDER STRAIN

Profitability at Nokia's key handset unit roughly halved to the lowest level this decade, and Nokia warned the unit's profitability would not reach its targeted 13-19 percent range in the first half of the year.

Global number three handset maker LG Electronics <066570.KS> earlier posted a record quarterly net loss, and last week number four Sony Ericsson announced a bigger-than-expected loss along with plans for further cost cuts.

Nokia said it aimed to cut annual costs at the handset unit by 700 million euros ($909 million).

"We are taking action to reduce overall costs and to preserve our strong capital structure. This is clearly our top priority in the current economic environment," Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said in a statement.

Nokia's figures confirmed that cell phone sales contracted last quarter for the first time in more than six years.

"Nokia is now having to cope with a 'double whammy' of market slowdowns in both developed and developing markets," said Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics.

"In recent weeks, the macroeconomic environment has deteriorated rapidly, with even weaker consumer confidence, unprecedented currency volatility and credit tightness continuing to impact the mobile communications industry," Kallasvuo said.

Nokia slashed its annual dividend proposal to 0.40 euros from 0.53 euros paid last year, and said it had no plans at the moment to buy back shares this year.

(Additional reporting by Brett Young in Helsinki, and Niklas Pollard and Victoria Klesty in Stockholm, editing by Will Waterman)