Shares of BlackBerry plunged nearly 30 per cent Friday after the
company posted a loss and warned of future losses despite releasing its
make-or-break new smartphones this year.
BlackBerry also announced that it will stop developing new
versions of its slow-selling tablet computer called the Playbook.
Analysts were looking for insight into how phones running BlackBerry's
new Blackberry 10 operating system are selling. It wasn't good.
BlackBerry said it sold 6.8 million phones overall versus 7.8
million last year. That includes older models. In wasn't until well into
a conference call with analysts that BlackBerry announced that 2.7
million of the devices sold in the quarter were Blackberry 10 models.
The company'ss Blackberry 10 operating system is critical to the
company's comeback. New phones running the BlackBerry 10 software began
selling around the world this year. The BlackBerry Z10, a touchscreen
model and the Q10, which sports a keyboard, have received positive
reviews, but there was a delay in getting them to market in the US.
The first quarter, however, included a substantial period of
sales of the Z10 phone in the US. It didn't include sales numbers for
the Q10 in the US. The Q10 just went on sale in the US earlier this
month.
Sales results and BlackBerry's projections, however, signal that
the new BlackBerry 10 phones are not selling well. The company said it
anticipates it will generate an operating loss in the second quarter,
too.
Mike Walkley, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity, said it's clear the new operating system has not turned the company around.
"With Z10, Q10, and Q5 all shipping in the August quarter and
BlackBerry still guiding to a loss we believe that is strong evidence
BB10 has not turned around BlackBerry in an extremely competitive
smartphone market," Walkley said.
Chief Executive Thorsten Heins said on a conference call with
analysts that the "transition takes time" and noted things are better
compared to last year when "we were told the company was finished."
Shares of Research in Motion Ltd. dropped $4.02, or 28 per cent, to close at $10.46 Friday.
The BlackBerry, introduced in 1999, was once the dominant
smartphone for on-the-go business people. But it lost its cachet not
long after Apple released the first iPhone in 2007. Apple's device reset
expectations for what a smartphone can do. RIM promised to catch up
while developing new a software system called BlackBerry 10, which uses
technology it got through its 2010 purchase of QNX Software Systems. But
the company took more than two years to unveil new phones that were
redesigned for the multimedia, Internet browsing and apps experience
that customers now demand. During that time, BlackBerry cut more than
5,000 jobs and saw shareholder wealth of more than $70 billion vanish.
The Canadian company said it lost $84 million, or 16 cents a
share, in the three months ended June 1 on revenue of $3.1 billion. It
lost $518 million, or 99 cents per share, on revenue of $2.8 billion a
year ago.
Analysts expected RIM to earn 5 cents a share on revenue of $3.37 billion.
The number of BlackBerry users in the world also fell by four
million to 72 million. BlackBerry also said it anticipates it will
generate an operating loss in the second quarter. Heins noted the highly
competitive smartphone market makes it difficult to estimate revenue
and levels of profitability.
Heins also announced on the call that he has halted further
development of BlackBerry's failed tablet offering, the Playbook. The
Playbook has not sold well.
"Our teams have spent a great deal of time and energy looking at
solutions that could move the BlackBerry 10 experience to Playbook, but
unfortunately I am not satisfied with the level of performance and user
experience and I made the difficult decision to stop these efforts and
focus on our core hardware portfolio," Heins said.
Heins said they'll continue to support the PlayBook on the
existing software platforms and configurations. Asked if RIM will
continue to make the Playbook, a BlackBerry spokeswoman said the company
is evaluating its hardware strategy.
Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners, said said it's tough for RIM because it's hard to make money on handsets now.
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