Filed under: Motorola (MOT) , Nokia Corp. (NOK) It looks like the recession is hurting mobile phones sales. According to The Wall Street Journal , "For the full year, Gartner said it expects handset sales to grow 11% to 1.28 billion phones, slowing from last year's 16% growth." A trend of that magnitude is bound to hit every company in the industry, but some have the financial strength and market share to weather the storm, That is especially true of Nokia (NYSE: NOK ), which has a global market share of 40% of handset sales. Samsung, which has 15% of the market and is one of the largest companies in Asia, should also be fine. Motorola (NYSE: MOT ) is another matter. Its global share has dropped from nearly 15% to just above 10% in a year. More financial pressure could poison its chances of spinning off its handset operation in 2009. It is already questionable whether the division has any value at all. The Motorola 10-Q shows that revenue at the company's mobile device operation fell 22% last quarter to $3.33 billion. The operating loss for the unit was $346 million. If the handset market as a whole is reaching a challenging period, what is to become of the weakest player in the industry? The answer is that Motorola may not be able to get rid of its handset operation. It may be faced with the much harder task of fixing it. Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com. Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | ...