Research In Motion Ltd. (RIMM)âs sales of the BlackBerry smartphone trounced estimates last quarter as it gained ground in emerging markets, signaling that the company may still have a future in the age of the iPhone.
RIM shares jumped as much as 25 percent in extended trading after the company sold 7.4 million smartphones, about 500,000 more than analysts had projected. RIM also posted a narrower loss for the period than estimated and increased its cash holdings. That impressed some of RIMâs biggest critics -- including shareholder Vic Alboini, who has previously demanded a shakeup in management and strategy.
âThose numbers are very, very positive,â Alboini, chairman of Toronto-based investment firm Jaguar Financial Corp., said in an interview yesterday. âRIM has taken a step up the ladder, and they can see where theyâre going.â
The results show that RIM can gain customers in lower- income markets such as Asia and Africa, even as it struggles to compete in the U.S. with Apple Inc. (AAPL)âs iPhone and devices running Google Inc. (GOOG)âs Android software. The challenge now is a successful release of the BlackBerry 10 phone, the linchpin of the Waterloo, Ontario-based companyâs comeback strategy.
âIf they can have another quarter of not burning cash and can get the device out in a few months, then investors are thinking, âPerhaps they have a chance to come back,ââ said Neeraj Monga, an analyst at Veritas Investment Research in Toronto who rates RIM a sell.
Shares Gain
RIM shares (RIMM) soared as high as $8.90 in extended trading yesterday after the report. The stock, which lost 68 percent of its value in the past year, had closed at $7.14 in New York.
RIMâs free BlackBerry Messenger program, known as BBM, has emerged as a selling point in developing countries, where data plans often cost more.
âItâs amazing when you go into those countries and you see how BBM is just kicking it,â Chief Executive Officer Thorsten Heins said on a conference call, fresh from a tour through Asia, the Middle East and Africa. âI mean, itâs everywhere.â
RIM also did a better job conserving cash than some analysts predicted, curtailing operating expenses 7.9 percent. Cash and investments grew to $2.3 billion by the end of last quarter, up from $2.2 billion three months earlier.
âThe fact cash is not going to burn out in a quarter or two gives us an opportunity to see what BB10 is going to do,â Alboini said.
BlackBerry Sales
Revenue fell 31 percent to $2.87 billion in the period, which ended Sept. 1, topping a projection of $2.47 billion.
While sales of the BlackBerryâs phone beat the 6.9 million predicted by analysts, they remain a fraction of Apple (AAPL)âs volume. The latest iPhone, released earlier this month, sold 5 million units in a single weekend.
RIMâs subscriber base climbed to 80 million at the end of last quarter, up from 78 million. Still, the new BlackBerry 10 lineup has been delayed at least a year, making it harder for the company to compete with the latest Apple and Android devices. At RIMâs software developer conference this week in San Jose, California, Heins said the debut of BB10 is âa few short months away,â without being more specific.
The delays mean the BlackBerry 10 will miss the holiday season, when new Android devices and phones built on Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)âs Windows 8 software will hit the market.
RIMâs share of the global smartphone market dropped to 4.8 percent in the second calendar quarter, from 12 percent a year earlier, according to research firm IDC. Still, Heins said this week that BB10 will have a âclear shotâ at being the worldâs third-largest mobile operating system. That would put it behind Android and Appleâs iOS, and ahead of Microsoft.
âContinued Pressureâ
RIM posted a second-quarter net loss of $235 million, or 45 cents a share, compared with net income of $329 million, or 63 cents, a year earlier. The company expects to have an operating loss this quarter and face âcontinued pressureâ on its operating results for the remainder of the fiscal year, Chief Financial Officer Brian Bidulka told analysts on the call.
Heins, who became CEO in January, has embarked on a cost- cutting plan to stem losses at the company. Heâs eliminating almost a third of its workforce and shutting down manufacturing sites to boost efficiency.
RIM also has hired JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and RBC Capital Markets to help explore its strategic options. Heins told analysts yesterday that heâs met with CEOs at various organizations over the past several months to discuss BB10 licensing and partnerships. He plans to continue meeting potential partners and hasnât set a specific timeframe for the end of the review. Heins has said in the past that he hasnât ruled out a sale of the company, though thatâs not his focus.
RIM needs to keep talking to potential partners because thereâs no guarantee that BB10 will be the companyâs savior, said Jaguar Financialâs Alboini.
âRIM is still losing money,â he said. âYou have to have a push-the-button, ready-to-go backup plan.â
To contact the reporters on this story: Hugo Miller in Toronto at hugomiller@bloomberg.net; Sean B. Pasternak in Toronto at spasternak@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net
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