Calgary Herald

RIM expected to post losses

Blackberry maker could hold a surprise

- DAVID FRIEND

After several months of technical setbacks, layoffs and an eroding market share, BlackBerry maker Research In Motion could get a mild reprieve from its compoundin­g troubles on Thursday when it issues its second-quarter financial report.

But analysts say that if investors heave a sigh of relief, it won’t be because RIM delivered a home run, but simply because the bad news, and its quarterly losses, didn’t worsen as much as expected.

“The stock has fallen so far that any slight bit of good news is going to be good for (it),” said Neeraj Monga, an analyst at Veritas Investment Research Corp.

Considerin­g the company’s perilous situation, what defines “good” is relative.

This year, RIM has watched its market share in North America dramatical­ly fall to about four per cent as the BlackBerry became an afterthoug­ht in the face of Apple’s iPhone and the Samsung Galaxy S3.

And while other companies debuted new devices, RIM was forced to push the launch of its BlackBerry 10 operating system and new phones into next year, missing the crucial back-to-school and holiday shopping seasons.

The company has also made significan­t reductions across its operations, closing facilities, severing ties with certain manufactur­ers and announcing plans to lay off 5,000 workers across its global operations in an effort to save $1 billion by the end of its fiscal year.

Analysts would certainly be pleased if RIM delivered secondquar­ter results which show that its operating losses weren’t as deep as expected.

Expectatio­ns peg the company’s loss to be equal to 47 cents per share, according to a poll of analysts by Bloomberg.

It would also be considered positive if RIM showed that it isn’t burning through its $2.2-billion cash reserve as quickly as some analysts expected.

Even more certainty around the launch of the much-delayed new BlackBerry smartphone­s could move the stock.

“We think shares will largely trade based on prospects for Blackberry 10,” said Bill Kreher, a technology analyst for Edward Jones in St. Louis, Mo.

That leaves a lot of room for a gut reaction from investors when RIM reports after market close on Thursday.

This week, the company’s shares moved higher after chief executive Thorsten Heins surprised analysts with an improvemen­t in the number of subscriber­s to its services.

Heins said the company’s user base grew to about 80 million at the end of its second quarter, up from 78 million in the previous quarter, a surprise to analysts who had widely expected RIM’s subscriber base to falter in the quarter.

 ?? Justin Sullivan/getty Images ?? Research In Motion, headed by chief executive Thorsten Heins, could get a mild reprieve when it issues its second-quarter financial report.
Justin Sullivan/getty Images Research In Motion, headed by chief executive Thorsten Heins, could get a mild reprieve when it issues its second-quarter financial report.

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