I recently posed the question, is
it time to sell Blackberry? Now Reuters,
citing unnamed sources familiar with the situation, reports that BlackBerry Ltd
is beginning to consider the possibility of going private.
Chief
Executive Thorsten Heins and the company's board is increasingly coming around
to the idea that taking BlackBerry private would give them breathing room to
fix its problems out of the public eye, the sources said.
"There
is a change of tone on the board," one of the sources said on Thursday.
No
deal is imminent, however, and BlackBerry has not launched any kind of a sale
process, the sources said. Even if it tried, BlackBerry could find it hard to
come up with a buyer and the funding to go private. With the company still
posting losses and bleeding subscribers, private equity firms and other buyers
may not want to step up.
The
company's shares have fallen more than 19 percent this year. Its market value
has fallen to $4.8 billion, from $84 billion at its peak in 2008.
BlackBerry,
which had been pinning its hopes for a turnaround on its new line of BlackBerry
10 devices, declined to comment. The sources declined to be named because these
discussions are private.
BlackBerry's
openness to consider a deal marks a radical shift in thinking at the once
high-flying smartphone maker. Until recently, BlackBerry, formerly known as
Research in Motion and a pioneer in providing secured emails on handheld
devices, had been bent on staying independent, betting its turnaround on its
latest smartphones.
Last
month, Heins said the company was on the right track and just needed more time
to fix its problems. He said the company will unveil more devices that run on
the BlackBerry 10 operating system over the next eight months.
The company
has also been looking at options such as licensing its BlackBerry 10 software
and other partnerships.
Waterloo,
Ontario-based BlackBerry has recently had discussions with private equity firm
Silver Lake Partners about potential collaboration in enterprise computing, one
of the sources said.
Silver
Lake is caught in a bruising $25 billion battle to take Dell Inc private.
Should it succeed in the Dell buyout, one possibility could be for it to
collaborate with BlackBerry in mobile computing, where the PC maker has
struggled to gain traction, the source said.
The
talks with Silver Lake did not involve any buyout or other transaction-related
discussions, the source said.
Silver
Lake declined to comment.
Pressure
is only increasing on the smartphone maker. BlackBerry 10 sales have come in
well below some analysts' expectations, raising questions about whether the
company can quickly win back market share from Apple Inc's iPhone as well as
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's Galaxy devices and other phones powered by Google
Inc's Android operating system.
Some
investors say the company must now look at all of its options, from a sale of
the whole company to a sale of parts. Its valuable patent portfolio and
high-margin services business could draw interest from technology companies.
But
private equity firms have circled the company for more than two years and have
tried without success so far to figure out ways to structure a deal.
Moreover,
Ottawa reviews any big takeover of a Canadian company for competitive and national
security reasons. Government officials have often said they want BlackBerry to
succeed as a Canadian company, but concede they do not know how things will
play out.
Tell
us what you think, should Blackberry go private? Is it time to dump those shares or should you
hang onto them a little while longer?
Blackberry, the actual embattled smart phone producer which was when the must have brand name with regard to Area bankers in addition to technologies geeks, possesses proved it is taking into consideration promoting the business.
ReplyDeleteInside a record, the business mentioned the board involving company directors got "formed its own panel to help discover strategic alternatives" such as "possible articulation projects, strategic relationships or even alliances, a new sales from the firm or even various other possible transactions".
Blackberry has become depreciating following failing to maintain up which consists of opponents – chiefly Apple mackintosh in addition to Samsung – since increasing numbers of phone people move to mobile phones. Throughout the newest quarter the business lost $84m (£54m) in addition to wants to forfeit a higher price from the 90 days towards the finish involving September.
Heading non public or even being acquired would allow the business to help reorganise the business devoid of the pressure involving external shareholder analysis – that is extreme following worth from the agency slumped via all around $84bn inside 08 to help less than $5bn currently.
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