To the surprise of many analysts, the company managed to report a small profit — $23 million (or $0.04 a share), thanks to accounting adjustments Under GAAP (General Accepted Accounting Principles). Take those adjustments — which were **n-cash changes — out of the equation, and the company reported a loss of $60 million or $0.11 a share) for the quarter.
Still, even if you view BlackBerry's Earnings as a net loss rather than a profit, the company is showing Signs of a turnaround. CEO John Chen, who took over BlackBerry seven months ago, is effectively stemming the pattern of losses in revenue, handset sales and market perception that have plagued the beleaguered company for the past few years. Read more...