Toronto Star

BlackBerry reports revenue, adjusted earnings beat estimates

Shares sink as CEO John Chen said quarter makes him “feel good” about fiscal outlook

- DAVID PADDON

BlackBerry Ltd. shares sank almost 10 per cent to their lowest levels in weeks on Friday, despite beating analysts’ estimates and reporting a solid start to its 2019 financial year.

The company’s stock closed down $1.45 (U.S.), or 9.29 per cent, at $14.16 on the Toronto Stock Exchange, back where it was trading in early May.

BlackBerry, which reports in U.S. currency, reported adjusted earnings of three cents per share, beating analysts’ expectatio­ns of neutral earnings, while revenue was $213 million, surpassing expectatio­ns of $208.02 million for the quarter ended May 31, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

Revenue from software and services was $189 million, up 18 per cent year-over-year, although growth was unevenly distribute­d between BlackBerry’s three main business units.

BlackBerry’s enterprise software and services business had $79 million of revenue, down 14 per cent from last year, while revenue from licensing intellectu­al property was up 96 per cent to $63 million. BlackBerry Technology Solutions, which primarily consists of the QNX business, was up 31 per cent at $47 million. BlackBerry CEO John Chen said the quarter makes him “feel good” about BlackBerry’s outlook for fiscal 2019, which began March 1, but said he doesn’t want to be overly optimistic about its growth— which he said would be gradual.

“Sometimes, (if ) you get overly bullish, you jinx yourself,” Chen said in an interview.

Chen said that BlackBerry expects QNX’s automotive products, which include older infotainme­nt software and newer technology for autonomous vehicles, will ramp up gradually rather than repeat the 31-percent year-over-year growth rate in this year’s first quarter.

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