For the next year or two, Research In Motion is as much about preserving cash as about selling BlackBerrys. Its very survival depends on it.
The company, which released dreadful quarterly
results on Thursday and delayed the launch of the next-generation
BlackBerry 10s until early 2013, is frantically cutting costs to align
with a revenue stream that has dropped 43 percent over the past year.
Even so,
RIM at best may have only enough cash to last two years, analysts and
insiders estimate, though it currently sits on a cache of $2.2 billion
and holds no debt.
“They’re going to hemorrhage cash,” predicted Edward Snyder from Charter Equity.
RIM needs
to hold out long enough to complete the biggest technology shift in its
history as it introduces the long-promised BlackBerry 10, now due out in
early 2013. That assumes of course that the market warms to the
devices.
“I don’t know how many carriers will care at that point,” said Jefferies analyst Peter Misek. “It’s just a disaster.”
RIM also has a $500 million credit facility that expires in September. The company is working with its banks to renew it, Chief Financial Officer Brian Bidulka said on a conference call after the results on Thursday.
Bidulka
was adamant that RIM would not start burning cash in the current
quarter, notwithstanding costs related to 5,000 job cuts, or about 30
percent of its workforce.
But if the
cash burn doesn’t start this quarter, it’s certainly to hit in the
three months that follow, analysts say, as the company tries to hold on
until the BlackBerry 10s arrive.
To do so,
RIM has essentially been giving away its older devices for next to
nothing as it seeks to protect its subscriber base from shrinking too
drastically ahead of the rollout.
That strategy has already produced one quarterly
operating loss, with no respite in sight until the Canadian company
finally gets the BlackBerry 10 out. The launch has already been
postponed twice.
Surprisingly,
RIM’s cash pile grew last quarter to $2.2 billion as it leaned on its
service revenue to offset slumping handset sales and pushed hard to
collect on outstanding invoices from its partners.
But
analysts see that as a clever piece of accounting that is unsustainable.
“It’s like scooping for change under your couch,” said Colin Gillis
from BGC Partners in New York. “You can do that once.”
Meanwhile, RIM is facing rising pressure to accept an alliance with Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) or sell its high-margin network business, according to three sources familiar with the situation.
Each
passing day that RIM sticks to its plan to go it alone diminishes the
value of its assets – including the cash – in any eventual sale,
analysts say.
“I don’t
think it’ll be zero but it’ll be sure close,” Jefferies’ Misek said
about the value that could be extracted from RIM by early next year.
“It depends on how much cash they burn between now and March next year, and by then it could be too late.”
Unlike its
handset peers, RIM can survive quarters in which it sells far fewer
phones than it builds, because it still receives around $1 billion in
revenue from subscription fees for the use of its network, which compresses and encrypts data sent to and from BlackBerry devices.
But global
subscriber growth appears to be waning. RIM can no longer count on
international momentum in countries such as India and Indonesia to
offset sharp defections in the United States, once RIM’s main market.
Even
worse, RIM is warning that fees it can charge per user will also drop
this year, further limiting the defensive strength of 78 million
locked-in subscribers.
“It looks like a slow, gradual death,” said one senior executive
in the British mobile industry, who declined to be named so as not to
damage a working relationship with RIM. “BlackBerry desperately need
something sexy to launch soon.”
Even as the cash-burn issue looms, RIM is taking a difficult but necessary decision to delay the launch, said Lawrence Perkins,
who runs West Coast operations including technology for restructuring
firm Conway MacKenzie. “It’s high stakes poker,” he said.
The alternative is to risk releasing another product before it is ready, a complaint leveled at the company’s PlayBook tablet last year, and at earlier software and hardware releases.
Perkins said a faulty product, even if to schedule, could prove a death knell for the company.
“Releasing a poor product is probably more dangerous than not releasing one at all,” he said
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