BlackBerry delivered fourth-quarter results that exceeded Wall Street projections across key metrics, propelling shares higher by over 10% during premarket hours Thursday.
The Waterloo-based technology firm reported quarterly revenue of $156 million, representing a 10% increase from the prior-year period and comfortably beating the Street’s $144.4 million estimate. On the earnings front, adjusted profit per share reached 6 cents, doubling last year’s 3-cent figure and topping the analyst consensus of 5 cents.
BlackBerry Limited, BB
The QNX segment emerged as the clear performance driver. This division saw revenue climb 20% year-over-year to $78.7 million. Meanwhile, the royalty backlog expanded to roughly $950 million. QNX’s embedded real-time operating system now powers over 275 million automobiles globally.
Giamatteo emphasized QNX’s entrenched position in safety-critical infrastructure as a strategic advantage. “Our business is much more immune to ‘SaaSmageddon’ because these are highly regulated, complex, mission-critical solutions,” he explained to Reuters.
Chief Financial Officer Tim Foote indicated that QNX will receive elevated investment levels in the upcoming fiscal year, concentrating resources on sales operations, marketing initiatives, and penetration into new verticals such as physical AI applications, robotics platforms, and medical technology.
BlackBerry’s cybersecurity communications segment also delivered solid results. This division, which derives roughly 75% of revenue from government contracts, registered an 8% revenue gain to $72.5 million during the quarter.
For the first quarter, BlackBerry issued revenue guidance ranging from $132 million to $140 million. The middle of this forecast band exceeds the $129.9 million Wall Street consensus.
Extending the view further, management anticipates fiscal 2027 adjusted earnings per share between 15 and 19 cents on revenue of $584 million to $611 million. This compares against fiscal 2026’s adjusted profit of 16 cents per share on $549.1 million in total revenue.
Giamatteo also outlined a more proactive capital deployment strategy. He indicated the organization is well-positioned to pursue complementary acquisitions that would accelerate QNX expansion, while also potentially implementing share repurchase programs when conditions warrant.
While shares posted impressive gains Thursday, historical perspective provides important context. BlackBerry’s stock price remains approximately 97% below its peak of $147.55 reached in June 2008.
The $950 million royalty backlog and the better-than-expected Q1 guidance represent the primary catalysts driving Thursday’s positive market response.
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