Tag Archives: bbry

‘Elephant’ Intel Dances, But 12,000 Layoffs Could Signal Recession

No. 1 chipmaker Intel ( INTC ) will cut 12,000 jobs by mid-2017, and that will help kick off a “recession” with nearly 400,000 tech positions to be cut this year, a Global Equities Research analyst predicted Tuesday. Late Tuesday, Intel added another domino to the layoff train, joining  VMware ( VMW ), Yahoo ( YHOO ), BlackBerry ( BBRY ), Autodesk ( ADSK ) and NetApp ( NTAP ), which recently announced plans to collectively lay off 5,125 employees. Intel’s 12,000-cut represents 11% of its global workforce. Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdhry says it’s just a drop in a 369,000 bucket (his prediction for tech layoffs that will be announced this year) and argued against a Federal Reserve rate increase amid what he calls a likely oncoming recession. PC Transition Will Be ‘Messy’ On Wednesday, Wall Street was largely split on Intel’s mixed Q1 , with at least five analysts still rating Intel stock a buy. At least two analysts cut their price targets, however, and another downgraded Intel stock. In early afternoon trading on the stock market today , Intel stock was up 1.5%, near 32. But shares are down 8% for the year vs. a 3% decline in IBD’s 39-company Electronic-Semiconductor Manufacturing industry group. For Q1 ended April 2, Intel reported $13.7 billion in sales and 54 cents earnings per share, up a respective 7% and 20% year over year. The consensus of 45 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected $13.8 billion and 48 cents. PC chip sales rose 2%, but that trailed stronger growth in data center, Internet of Things and security — up a respective 9%, 22% and 12%. Nonvolatile memory chip sales fell 6%. Current-quarter sales guidance for $13.5 billion, plus or minus $500 million, lagged the consensus for $14.2 billion. Intel’s April quarter benefited from an extra week. Intel’s transition from a PC-oriented company will be “messy,” Credit Suisse analyst John Pitzer wrote in a research report. Late Tuesday, CEO Brian Krzanich said the layoffs would allow Intel to save $750 million in the first year and $1.4 billion per year starting by mid-2017, so that the company can “intensify” investments in key growth areas. Pitzer reiterated an outperform rating and a 40 price target on Intel stock. ‘Trying To Be More Nimble’ PCs represented 55% of Intel’s Q1 sales vs. 58% a year earlier. In 2011, the client computing group accounted for 65% of Intel’s revenue. The company is aiming to trim that to 50%, which Semiconductors Advisers President Robert Maire calls a “milestone.” “Intel is certainly trying, perhaps with varying degrees of success, to get revenue from many other markets,” Maire wrote in a research report. “While individually, none hold a candle to the PC market, collectively they have been a great offset.” Unlike other companies, Intel isn’t in the red while transitioning, Maire noted. He likened the restructuring — which includes transitioning CFO Stacy Smith into a role leading sales, manufacturing and operations — to teaching an elephant to dance. The elephant theme was popular Wednesday. “Who says elephants can’t dance?” Summit Research analyst Srini Sundararajan queried in a report. Sundararajan reiterated his buy rating and 37 price target on Intel stock. “Keeping (2016) capital expenditures the same ($9.5 billion at the midpoint) while proceeding with a layoff confirms that Intel is trying to be more nimble and refocusing itself away from the PC,” he wrote in a report. During Q2, Intel will recognize a $1.2 billion restructuring charge. But the second half of 2016 looks promising, Sundararajan said. Intel dropped full-year guidance to mid-single-digit growth vs. earlier views for mid- to high-single-digit growth. Sundararajan says this suggests a big second-half-year recovery, with revenue up 13%.

Is It Time For BlackBerry To Finally Dump Its Smartphone Business?

There was a time when BlackBerry ( BBRY ) was the king of smartphones, until Apple ( AAPL ) rattled the world by introducing the iPhone in 2007. Users of the BlackBerry phone were once known as “crackberry” addicts for their intense loyalty. But sales of the once-iconic device have slid down a continuous slope since the iPhone’s debut. That was followed by the Android operating system by Alphabet ( GOOGL ), adopted by a plethora of smartphones that flood the market. BlackBerry’s smartphone market share has dwindled to about 1% — and it’s about time for the company to just get out of that market, says Richard Windsor, an analyst at Edison Investment Research, in a research note Monday. When BlackBerry ruled the smartphone market, beginning around 2003, its stock took off, peaking at 148 in June 2008. It now trades near 7. To salvage its business, BlackBerry has focused on secure mobile software and services, but it still makes smartphones. In its fiscal-fourth-quarter earnings report, issued Friday, BlackBerry said total software and service revenue more than doubled in fiscal 2016 to $527 million. The software business exceeded expectations, helping BlackBerry beat Q4 earnings estimates for the period ended Feb. 29, but its revenue fell short, dragged down by slower-than-expected hardware sales. Shares plummeted 7.5% on Friday, and BlackBerry stock fell 2.8%, to 7.27, in the stock market today . “Software was marred by the company’s insistence on staying in the hardware business,” wrote Windsor. “The better-than-expected profitability was almost entirely due to software being a larger part of the mix than expected.” BlackBerry is fighting for a comeback in smartphones with its Leap and Priv handsets. Priv, BlackBerry’s first Android-based device, was released in November. BlackBerry sold 600,000 smartphones in Q4, down from 700,000 in Q3. (By comparison, Apple sold 74.78 million iPhones in Q4). Contract Talks With Verizon Slowed BlackBerry BlackBerry CEO John Chen blamed the drop on longer-than-expected contract negotiations with certain major carriers, including Verizon ( VZ ). Verizon didn’t begin carrying the Priv until March. “We suspect that these negotiations are taking longer than expected because Verizon and the other carriers have realized that the niche that BlackBerry is targeting is far smaller than BlackBerry thinks,” Windsor wrote. “We think that the main problem with the Priv is that essentially all smartphone users no longer care about having a physical keyboard, and those that do are a tiny minority in the financial and government sectors.” Chen, on the company’s earnings conference call, said BlackBerry would exit smartphones if it cannot make money on the device and if it becomes a burden to its turnaround effort. There’s still time, he says. “We are still on track, with our plans calling for achieving device business profitability sometime in this fiscal year,” Chen said. “Our value proposition to offer the most secure Android smartphone for the enterprise is actually quite strong.” Windsor said BlackBerry’s response to poor sales of the Priv is to have a go at producing a mid-range Alphabet Android device in the hope that the lower price spurs some sales. “While this might result in slightly better volumes, it will not produce a decent level of profitability. This is because Android is a brutally competitive commodity business,” he said. Chen has done a good job with the software business, but hardware is not his strength, Windsor wrote. “We think that the fact that he is not a veteran of the handset industry is a factor in BlackBerry choosing to carry on when it should really cease,” Windsor said. “Although, this will be painful, we think it is the best course of action for this company as resources that are being wasted on developing hardware can then be more profitably employed.”

BlackBerry Q4 Revenue Falls Far Short Of Estimates As Stock Tumbles

Deep in a turnaround effort that aims to slow its sinking revenue growth and return it to profitability, BlackBerry ( BBRY ) turned in mixed results Friday morning that sent its stock crashing. The provider of smartphones and security software reported revenue of $464 million for its fiscal Q4 ended Feb. 29, down 30% from the year-earlier quarter and missing the consensus estimate of $563.2 million. But it reported a per-share loss minus items of 3 centers where analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected a 10-cent loss. BlackBerry stock was down more than 7%, near 7.50, in early trading in the stock market today . BlackBerry stock is down 19% in 2016 so far. The company, however, said that its software and services revenue rose 106% to $153 million, exceeding its estimates. “Overall, BlackBerry’s Q4 performance was solid as we made progress on the key elements of our strategy, which are to grow software faster than the mobility software market, achieve device profitability and generate positive free cash flow,” CEO John Chen said in the company’s earnings release. “Our strategy is on track and our growth engines are in place to continue to generate above-market growth in software and achieve our profitability objectives.” The smartphone maker that once dominated the field prior to the Apple ( AAPL ) iPhone, followed by Android from Alphabet ( GOOGL ), is pivoting to other areas. BlackBerry has made several acquisitions in the last two years, among them its $425 million purchase of Good Technology. The deal widely expanded BlackBerry’s security software platform to other smartphones and operating systems.