New York,
Dec 29 : Research In Motion shares tumbled more than 10 percent after
the company reported the first ever decline in its subscriber numbers and
outlined plans to transform the way it charges for its BlackBerry
services.
RIM, which hopes to revive its fortunes and reinvent itself via
the launch of a brand new line of BlackBerry 10 devices next month, caught
investors off-guard on its quarterly conference call, when it said it plans to
alter its service revenue model - a move that will pressure the high-margin
business that accounts for about a third of RIM's sales.
"RIM provided
few details regarding the economics of these changes, thus adding a large cloud
of uncertainty to the primary driver of its profitability, which we view as
especially worrisome given risks already surrounding the firm's massive
BlackBerry 10 transition," said Morningstar analyst Brian Colello.
Those
subscribers who need enhanced services like advanced security will pay for these
services, while those who do not use such services will generate much lower to
no service revenue, RIM Chief Executive Thorsten Heins told analysts and
investors on a conference call.
"I want to be very clear on this. Service
revenues are not going away, but our business model and service offerings are
going to evolve ... The mix in level of service fees revenue will change going
forward and will be under pressure over the next year," cautioned
Heins.
The news startled investors, who had earlier in the evening pushed
RIM's stock more than 7 percent higher in post-market trading, after the company
reported a narrower-than-expected quarterly loss and said it boosted its cash
cushion ahead of next month's crucial launch of the BlackBerry 10
smartphone.
RIM's shares have for weeks been on a tear as optimism around
BB10 has grown. Following RIM's surprise announcement on service revenues,
however, the stock ended 9 percent lower at $12.85 in trading after the closing
bell.
Analysts also expressed concern about the decline in RIM's
subscriber base.
"The early reaction was probably just 'Hey, numbers
looked OK, better loss, the cash flow was good' but if you know the company,
you're looking at the subscriber base falling off," said Mark McKechnie at
Evercore Partners in San Francisco.
One reason the shares rose earlier
was RIM managed to build up its cash cushion to $2.9 billion from $2.3 billion
in the previous quarter.
Analysts have been keeping a sharp eye on the
size of RIM's cash pile, as RIM will need the funds to manufacture and
effectively promote BlackBerry 10 in a crowded market.
RIM is counting on
the new line to claw back market share lost in recent years to the likes of
Apple Inc's iPhone and a slew of devices powered by Google Inc's Android
operating system.
"They've done a great job at generating cash," said
Raymond James analyst Tavis McCourt in Nashville. "They're certainly in a much
better position than they were three or four quarters ago."
The Waterloo,
Ontario-based company said it is now testing its BB10 devices with more than 150
carriers - up from about 50 carriers as of the end of October. RIM expects more
carriers to come on board ahead of the formal launch of BB10 on January
30.
Positive feedback from developers and carriers around RIM's new
BlackBerry 10 devices has buoyed the stock in the last three months. Despite the
plunge in RIM's share price, the stock has more than doubled in value the last
three months.
On an operating basis, RIM fared a little better than Wall
Street had expected. It reported a loss of $114 million or 22 cents a share,
excluding one-time items. Analysts, on average, had forecast a loss of 35 cents
a share.
RIM also reported a surprise net profit of $9 million, or 2
cents a share, for its fiscal third quarter ended December 1, on the back of a
one-time income tax related gain. That compared with a year-ago profit of $265
million, or 51 cents.
RIM said it shipped 6.9 million smartphones in the
quarter, even as its subscriber base fell to about 79 million in the quarter
from about 80 million in the period ended September 1.
In recent years,
RIM's user base has grown, even as the BlackBerry lost ground in North America
and Europe, boosted by gains in emerging markets. While eye opening, the
shrinkage was not as bad as some observers expected during the last quarter
before the BB10 launch.
"We're encouraged that the subscriber base only
declined slightly during a very public transition, and BlackBerry sales were
about what we expected," said Morningstar's Colello, who is based in
Chicago.
Ends
SA/EN
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RIM shares slump as service revenue, subscriber concerns weigh
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