Cape Breton Post

BlackBerry Q2 financial report contains no major surprises

- BY DAVID FRIEND

TORONTO — At least BlackBerry’s second quarter wasn’t any worse than expected.

The Waterloo, Ont.-based smartphone company had a US$965 million loss in the three months ended Aug. 31 and revenue plunged to US$1.6 billion, down 49 per cent from this year’s first quarter and 45 per cent from last year’s second quarter.

Bill Kreher, a technology analyst with Edward Jones, said the biggest takeaway from BlackBer- ry’s second-quarter report on Friday was that the actual results were in line with the estimates issued by the company last week.

“We didn’t see any surprises, and I believe that the Street treated that with relief,” Kreher said.

After the report, BlackBerry shares moved up 10 cents to $8.32 on the Toronto Stock Exchange near midday. On the Nasdaq, shares gained 11 cents to $8.06.

Part of the overall quarterly loss was a $934-million charge from unsold BlackBerry Z10 phones, the touchscree­n device which hit shelves earlier this year and failed to catch fire with consumers.

The company recognized hardware revenue on about 3.7 million BlackBerry smartphone­s sold in the quarter, with “most” of the units being its older BlackBerry 7 devices.

The results also show BlackBerry (TSX:BB) drew down some of its cash reserves, considered a potential safety net. As of Aug. 31, BlackBerry had about US$2.6 billion of cash and investment­s, down half a billion dollars since May.

Its financial report was vague about what its cash was used for, saying the biggest chunk of it — about $268 million — went towards “intangible assets,” which is a general undefinabl­e term for non-physical assets. About $136 million when to operations and another $112 million was put into capital spending.

On a per share basis, the adjusted loss was equal to 47 cents per share compared to analyst expectatio­ns of 48 cents per share, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters

“We are very disappoint­ed with our operationa­l and financial results this quarter,” said chief executive Thorsten Heins in a release.

“We understand how some of the activities we are going through create uncertaint­y, but we remain a financiall­y strong company with $2.6 billion in cash and no debt.”

Heins, who has scrapped his usual conference call with analysts, said BlackBerry is focused on completing its restructur­ing quickly in order to establish “a more focused and efficient company.”

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