Waterloo Region Record

Topping expectatio­ns BlackBerry sees growth in auto unit, enterprise software, services

Company also is seeing growth in its enterprise software and services businesses

- IAN BICKIS

WATERLOO — BlackBerry Ltd.’s shares surged Friday after its latest financial results topped expectatio­ns and it outlined plans for growth in autonomous driving, a push into health care and intentions to add significan­t engineerin­g talent.

The company beat expectatio­ns through growth in its enterprise software and services business, as well as in its fastgrowin­g automotive division, John Chen, BlackBerry’s executive chair and chief executive, said in an interview.

“Transporta­tion, especially when it comes to autonomous driven vehicles and connected car, that unit had done the best in the last quarter,” he said.

The company, which keeps its books in U.S. dollars, said it earned US$43 million, or eight cents per basic share, in its latest quarter, more than double earnings of $19 million, or four cents per basic share, a year ago.

On an adjusted basis, BlackBerry said it earned four cents per share for the quarter, beating the penny per share profits analysts on average had expected, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

The company’s shares gained $1.35, or 10.17 per cent, to close at $14.62 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Friday.

While overall revenue dropped to $210 million from $238 million last year, the automotive division saw 29 per cent revenue growth with more to come, said Chen.

“It will continue to grow double-digit for the next couple quarters, so we think that is a big growth opportunit­y for BlackBerry.”

The company recently announced a partnershi­p with Ottawa-based technology accelerato­r L-SPARK to help smalland medium-sized businesses bring new products to market using its BlackBerry QNX automotive software.

Chen said the company also plans to ramp up efforts in autonomous driving and other divisions.

“You ask our own people, who are much more bullish than I am, they’re talking about adding a thousand engineers,” he said.

“It’s going to be multi-years. I mean, you can’t find a thousand engineers because there’s such high demand and short supply. But we do have the advantage that a lot of our developmen­t organizati­on is in Canada, so we’re very closely tied to the university programs. So we’re going to hire a lot of engineers, I’m sure.”

But while technology developmen­t is ramping up on the automotive side, Chen said he’s more cautious than his colleagues as to when we’ll see fully autonomous vehicles take hold.

He said the technology should be available and affordable in the next few years, but thinks infrastruc­ture and policies on safety and other issues will push back a widespread rollout.

“I’m encouraged for the future, I just think that most people think it’s going to happen faster than I think it will.”

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 ?? ANDREW RYAN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A BlackBerry employee works at the company’s network operating centre in Waterloo. The NOC is the control centre for all of Blackberry’s secure networks. The company’s latest quarter beat analysts’ expectatio­ns.
ANDREW RYAN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A BlackBerry employee works at the company’s network operating centre in Waterloo. The NOC is the control centre for all of Blackberry’s secure networks. The company’s latest quarter beat analysts’ expectatio­ns.

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