The Canadian company, which last year stopped manufacturing the
iconic BlackBerry smartphone to focus on software, reported a
profit of 5 cents a share before special items for the second
quarter ended on Aug. 31, compared with break-even per share a
year earlier.
Revenue fell to $249 million from $352 million a year earlier
but rose slightly from $244 million in the prior quarter.
Analysts had on average expected BlackBerry to break even on
revenue of $220 million, excluding items, according to Thomson
Reuters I/B/E/S.
Net income for the quarter was $19 million, or 4 cents per
share.
Excluding restructuring costs and other items, BlackBerry said
it expected fiscal-year revenue of $920 million to $950 million
and positive earnings per share. It also forecast positive free
cash flow.
The Waterloo, Ontario-based company is aiming to notch 10
percent to 15 percent software revenue growth for its fiscal
year, which runs until the end of February.
BlackBerry said software and services revenue reached a record
$196 million in the quarter, more than the estimates of $174
million from RBC analyst Paul Trieber and $176.2 million from
Macquarie's Gus Papageorgiou.
(Reporting by Alastair Sharp; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Lisa
Von Ahn)
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