Tech pioneer BlackBerry has
made a last roll of the dice and agreed to a probable $4.7 billion buyout by a
consortium planning to take the struggling smartphone maker private.
BlackBerry
was once a leader in mobile tech but has been squeezed by rivals Android and Apple, which coincidentally announced
record sales of its latest iPhone on Monday.
According
to Yahoo, the Ontario-based company said it had signed
a letter of intent with a group led by Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited,
which has offered to acquire the company.
Fairfax,
a Canadian firm headed by billionaire Prem Watsa, is already BlackBerry's
largest shareholder with approximately 10 percent of its shares.
Watsa resigned from BlackBerry's board in
August when it announced a search for a suitor.
Watsa said the sale "will open an
exciting new private chapter for BlackBerry, its customers, carriers and
employees."
"We can deliver immediate value to shareholders
while we continue the execution of a long-term strategy in a private company."
Ironically, the announcement came on the same
day that Apple said it sold a record nine million iPhones in three days after
launching two new versions of its smartphone last week.
Under the proposed BlackBerry-Fairfax deal the
consortium would offer $9 for each outstanding share, and Fairfax would
contribute its own shares in the transaction.
BlackBerry said its board supports the plan.
A firm deal, once due diligence is completed,
is expected by November 4. It also hinges on the consortium obtaining financing.
BlackBerry said it would continue a search for
a possibly better suitor in the interim.
BlackBerry stock was down six percent to $8.23
before trading was halted just prior to its announcement.
Its shares bounced back in afternoon trading
to close at $9.08 but remain far below the stock's historical high. Analysts reacted with measured optimism.
"This
is probably the best possible outcome of several unattractive options for
BlackBerry," said analyst Jack Gold of
J. Gold Associates.
While BlackBerry helped create a culture of
mobile users glued to smartphones, many have since moved to iPhones or devices
using Android software like Samsung's Galaxy range.
According to International Data Corporation,
BlackBerry's global market share had slipped to 3.7 percent in the second
quarter, the lowest since tracking began.
Android accounts for nearly 80 percent.
The company, formerly known as Research In
Motion, unveiled a new corporate name and a new platform in January as it
sought to regain momentum, but its most recent numbers suggest this has been a
spectacular failure.
On
Friday, the company announced it was laying off 4,500 staff -- or one-third of
its global workforce -- after a dismal launch of new smartphone models
earlier this year.
It predicted a nearly $1 billion second
quarter loss due to poor sales of its new Z10 touchscreen smartphone, which was
aimed at competing with Apple and Android's flagships.
Gold and
other analysts said going private -- and possibly returning company founder
Mike Lazaridis at the helm -- would give the firm room to "put the house
in order."
Going forward, BlackBerry would be a much
smaller player in handheld devices, but Gold said
"being private would mean Wall Street is not continuously breathing down
their neck."
Furthermore, its key enterprise customers may
not feel compelled to replace their BlackBerry servers for fear that the
company is going out of business.
"It could provide them with cover to
re-architect the company even more than they are now," said Gold.
Boston University professor N. Venkat
Venkatraman said the company could attract firms like IBM, HP or Dell if it
focused on business communications not private consumers.
The company's sustainability, however, would
still remain in doubt.
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