Friday, 20 December 2013

BlackBerry Reports Massive $4.4 Billion Quarterly Loss, Inks a Deal With Foxconn

BlackBerry, the troubled Canadian smartphone company, just reported its quarterly results and, well, let’s just say its troubles aren’t getting any smaller.
Its loss, on a GAAP basis, came out to $4.4 billion on revenue of $1.2 billion. That works out to a per-share loss of $8.37. The loss was the result of a huge $2.7 billion charge against assets, and another $266 million restructuring charge.
After backing out those charges, the company lost $354 million, or 67 cents a share. It exited the quarter with $3.2 billion in combined cash and short-term investments. Sales fell by 56 percent compared to the year-ago quarter. It sold 4.3 million BlackBerry devices during the quarter.
BlackBerry shares fell in pre-market trading by more than five percent, to $5.94, after the news was announced. The shares have fallen by more than 47 percent this year.
John Chen, thenew CEO who took over afterThorstenHeins was fired   tried to set a positive tone in a statement:
“We have accomplished a lot in the past 45 days, but still have significant work ahead of us as we target improved financial performance next year. However, the Company is financially strong, has a broad and trusted product portfolio to work with, a talented employee base and a new leadership team dedicated to implementing our new roadmap.”
The company also said it has cut a five-year strategic partnership with Foxconn, the China-based contract manufacturing giant that builds much of the world’s consumer electronics. Under the terms, Foxconn will help BlackBerry develop new phones, build them, and then manage the inventory. The first target of the effort will be a phone aimed at the Indonesian market.
Source: AllThingsD

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