TORONTO
(AP) — BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion posted
another large quarterly loss on Thursday, but the hemorrhaging was not as bad
expected.
The Canadian
company is still losing market share in
North America, where it struggles to compete with Apple's iPhone and phones
that run Google's Android software. But it has stepped up sales in developing
markets and actually increased its subscriber base and cash position.
RIM's stock
surged more than 20 percent in after-market trading on the news.
The company
reported Thursday that it lost $235 million, or 45 cents a share, in its fiscal
second quarter, which ended Sept 1. That compares with a profit of $419
million, or 80 cents per share, a year ago.
RIM reported
revenue of $2.9 billion.
Analysts
polled by FactSet expected a loss of 47 cents on revenue of $2.49 billion.
RIM said it
shipped 7.4 million BlackBerry smartphones
in the quarter, down from 10.6 million in the same period last year. Some
analysts predicted RIM would ship only 6.4 million devices as the company
prepares to launch much-delayed new BlackBerrys that have been deemed critical
to its survival.
RIM
pioneered the smartphone in 1999 but North American consumers have been
abandoning BlackBerrys for flashier, touchscreen phones in recent years. RIM is
banking its future on its much-delayed BlackBerry 10 platform, which is meant
to offer the multimedia, Internet browsing and apps experience that users now
demand.
Chief
Executive Thorsten Heins said
on a conference call with analysts that BlackBerry 10 is still on track to be
released in the first quarter of 2013 — several months after the release of
Apple's iPhone 5, which came out earlier this month. Heins said competitors
have released strong products recently but vowed BlackBerry 10 "will
advance the operating system environment to a whole new level."
Heins
replaced co-CEOs Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis in January after the company
lost tens of billions in market value. He surprised many this week when he said
at a conference for mobile applications developers that RIM has 80 million
subscribers, up from 78 million in early June. Many analysts had expected RIM
to start losing subscribers in the second quarter.
The results
show that RIM is making progress as it transitions to its next generation of
BlackBerry smartphones and completes its cost reduction plan, Heins said.
Jefferies
analyst Peter Misek said RIM did a great job in the quarter, considering the
challenges it faced. He noted, however, that doesn't account for much because
its new smartphones are not out yet.
"They
are driving sales in emerging markets and we think they will continue to lose
subscribers in developed markets," Misek said. "It doesn't tell you
anything about the long-term success of the platform or the company."
RIM's sales
outside the United States, United Kingdom and Canada were about 58 percent of
total revenue, said Brian Bidulka, the company's chief financial officer. He
noted sales were strong in Indonesia, South Africa and Venezuela, but declined
in the U.S.
Sales in the
U.S. represented 22 percent of revenue, down from 25 percent in the first
quarter and 27 percent in the second quarter last year. Bidulka said RIM's
business will continue to be challenged until the new BlackBerrys are launched.
Research
firm IDC says BlackBerry's U.S. market share has plummeted from 45.8 percent in
2008 to 2.7 percent in 2012.
RIM has been
laying off thousands of workers to offset the losses.
Heins noted
RIM's cash position stood at $2.3 billion at Sept. 1, up from $2.2 billion at
the end of the previous quarter. The company is very focused on maintaining a
strong financial position as it transitions to the new platform, he said.
Colin
Gillis, an analyst with BGC Financial, said RIM's ability to grow the
subscriber base while not hurting its cash position is encouraging.
"It
does give them more time. The talk of bankruptcy has probably dissipated right
now," Gillis said. "These are all the right moves, but does it change
that their position is still bleak?"
RIM's stock
rose $1.46 cents to $8.60 in extended U.S. trading Thursday. It had ended the
regular trading session up 14 cents at $7.14. RIM's struggles have wiped out
some $80 billion in shareholder wealth since 2008, a drop of over 90 percent.
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