BlackBerry Ltd.
reported a quarterly loss of nearly one billion dollars in line with
last week’s warning.
The development
was days after accepting its largest shareholder’s tentative 4.7 billion
dollars bid to take it out of the public eye.
BlackBerry, which
had warned of poor results on Sept. 20, said its net loss for the second
quarter ended on Aug. 31 was 965 million dollars, or 1.84 a share.
Revenue fell 45
per cent to 1.6 billion dollars from a year earlier.
The loss included
a write-down of about 934 million dollars for unsold Z10 phones; a touch screen
model that the company had hoped would reverse its fading fortunes.
The phone has sold
badly with business and consumer customers alike.
The auditors were
not convinced that BlackBerry can sell it or sell it at prices that the company
was hoping for.
Excluding the Z10
write-down and restructuring costs, BlackBerry reported a loss of 248 million
dollars or 47 cents a share.
The company plans
to shed 4,500 jobs or more than one-third of its workforce as it shrinks to
focus on corporate and government customers.
It will not host
the typical post-results call for investors after signing a tentative nine
dollars-a-share agreement to be acquired by a consortium led by Fairfax
Financial, its largest shareholder.
The Waterloo,
Ontario-based company’s steep revenue decline and mounting losses have revived
fears that BlackBerry, a pioneer in the Smartphone sector, faces an ignominious
death.
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