Edmonton Journal

Blackberry tanks on dismal earnings

$67 million loss and poor sales send shares down 27 per cent

- MATT HARTLEY

TORONTO — A cold dose of financial reality has snuffed out the warm afterglow that accompanie­d the initial phases of BlackBerry Ltd.’s attempted comeback earlier this year.

BlackBerry got a stern reality check Friday when investors sent shares of the Waterloo, Ont.-based smartphone maker plunging after the former Research in Motion reported weaker than anticipate­d smartphone sales combined with financial results that fell short of Wall Street expectatio­ns, including an adjusted net loss of $67 million US.

After posting a surprising quarterly profit just three months ago on the strong initial rollout of a fresh line of smartphone­s powered by the new BlackBerry 10 operating system, BlackBerry swung to a loss for the first quarter — covering the three months ending June 1 — and forecast another loss for the current quarter, casting a shadow over the struggling company’s attempts to right itself.

Shares of the BlackBerry maker plummeted 26.38 per cent, a loss of $3.97 to $11.08 at the close of trading Friday on the Toronto Stock Exchange and fell more than 27 per cent to close at $10.46 US on the Nasdaq.

BlackBerry chief executive Thorsten Heins appealed for patience, telling analysts that the company is far from finished rolling out BlackBerry 10 devices, and that its services business would continue to improve as more corporate clients upgraded to BlackBerry’s new enterprise offerings.

Heins added that he was unwilling to sacrifice the company’s long-term strategy in order to improve short-term financial metrics.

“We don’t plan to run the company with a short-term, device-only strategy,” Heins said.

Friday’s earnings report was highly anticipate­d by BlackBerry observers, as it promised to offer the clearest picture yet of how the company’s new smartphone­s are performing as it seeks to counter potentiall­y overwhelmi­ng competitio­n from its rivals — namely Apple Inc.’s iPhone and devices running Google Inc.’s Android software.

BlackBerry’s first-quarter numbers included a full period of sales of the touchscree­n Z10 device in the coveted United States market — where BlackBerry has struggled in recent years — as well as the first early sales figures relating to the Q10 smartphone, which features a physical QWERTY keyboard and went on sale in Canada and the United Kingdom during the quarter.

Although BlackBerry’s reported first-quarter revenue of $3.1 billion US was up 15 per cent from the $2.68 billion US generated in the previous quarter, sales fell short of analyst expectatio­ns.

Wall Street had looked for BlackBerry to report revenue of roughly $3.4 billion US, with earnings of about eight cents per share, according to Bloomberg estimates.

BlackBerry said it sold 6.8 million BlackBerry smartphone­s during the quarter, which also fell short of estimates from analysts, who had anticipate­d sales of more than seven million units.

Once again, the company’s global subscriber base fell; there are now roughly 72 million BlackBerry users, down from a peak of about 80 million.

Chief financial officer Brian Bidulka told investors that about 40 per cent of BlackBerry sales in the quarter were BB10 devices.

Despite selling 100,000 PlayBook tablet computers in the quarter, Heins said the company has scrapped plans to bring BlackBerry 10 software to the company’s tablet.

While BlackBerry will continue to support the current tablet software, the decision casts a shroud of uncertaint­y over the future of the PlayBook.

“They’re not going to go out of business tomorrow,” said Colin Gillis, a financial analyst with BGC Partners in New York. “They have $3 billion US in cash, but the question of the viability of the company is still open. That’s the reality of the situation. They’re not knocked out of the game, but it sure looks like a rough road ahead.”

Last month, BlackBerry unveiled the first low-cost BlackBerry 10 device — the Q5 — which the company plans to roll out to internatio­nal and developing smartphone markets where it continues to sell devices powered by its legacy BlackBerry OS software.

Heins also highlighte­d that the company is still working to get its revamped corporate offerings, namely BlackBerry Enterprise Service 10, out to its enterprise customers. Heins said there’s a correlatio­n between BlackBerry 10 device sales and the adoption of BES10.

BlackBerry said the adjusted loss for the quarter was $67 million US, or 13 cents per share diluted, compared to a loss of $510 million US or 97 cents per share diluted in the same quarter last year, and a profit of $94 million US in the March quarter.

However, BlackBerry said that sales in Europe, the Middle East and Africa — which account for roughly 40 per cent of the company’s revenue — grew nine per cent in the quarter. At the same time, BlackBerry said revenue in North America rose 30 per cent, while sales in the Asia-Pacific region grew 35 per cent.

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Thorsten Heins

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