The Guardian (Charlottetown)

BlackBerry’s Q4 revenue ahead of expectatio­ns

- BY DAVID PADDON

BlackBerry Ltd.’s revenue and adjusted earnings came in above analyst estimates in its fourth quarter, as all three of the company’s main software divisions showed growth.

The Waterloo, Ont.-based company, which reports in U.S. currency, had $233 million of revenue for the quarter ended Feb. 28. Its operating income was $19 million or five cents per share.

Analysts had estimated BlackBerry would have $216.4 million of revenue for the quarter and break even on an adjusted basis, with zero cents per share of operating income, according to Thomson Reuters data.

John Chen, who is BlackBerry’s chief executive and executive chairman, said he was pleased with the company’s progress since it decided to stop manufactur­ing smartphone­s.

Chen noted that all three of its software divisions - focused on enterprise, intellectu­al property licensing and automotive markets grew in the fourth quarter, both year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter.

“Our strategy is working,” Chen said. “This gives us confidence that we could capitalize on the significan­t market opportunit­ies available today as well as in the future.”

The current opportunit­ies include enterprise software and services that provide government­s and regulated industries, such as banking, the tools to provide secure communicat­ion for their employees, partners and customers.

“The heritage of BlackBerry gives us the right to play in this area, both from a knowhow and a reputation­al point of view,” Chen said in an interview.

He said there’s an opportunit­y to “upsell” to current enterprise customers with products and services such as the BlackBerry Bridge, announced last week, which is designed to provide heightened security to all Microsoft Office applicatio­ns used by an organizati­on’s workforce, suppliers and business partners.

The Bridge product is currently in final customer trials prior to general availabili­ty.

Besides its traditiona­l vertical market segments, BlackBerry is also seeing expanded opportunit­ies within the hospital, pharmaceut­ical and energy vertical markets. It’s also building its presence in China, Korea, and Japan, he said.

For Chen, BlackBerry’s future includes opportunit­ies for securely connected devices, as its Radar hardware and service for the trucking industry, and for QNX software embedded in connected and autonomous vehicles.

BlackBerry is primarily a software component supplier to Tier 1 automotive suppliers, including Canada’s Magna Internatio­nal, but it’s also working with Ford and, more recently Jaguar Land Rover, as they develop their vehicles.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ AP/MANU FERNANDEZ ?? A man holds the new BlackBerry KEYone before the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ AP/MANU FERNANDEZ A man holds the new BlackBerry KEYone before the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

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