Where Will BlackBerry Be in 2 Years?

BlackBerry stock saw a remarkable rally, gaining 125%. Is this the point of turnaround investors have been waiting for?

| More on:
a person watches stock market trades

Source: Getty Images

BlackBerry (TSX:BB) stock shocked investors in the last few months, rising 125% between December 2024 and February 2025. However, this rally was short-lived, as the market reacted to something positive in a company that was depleting its cash reserves with constant losses.

BlackBerry’s stock price rally is unsustainable

BlackBerry reported its first-ever operating cash flow in many years in November 2024, which pushed the stock up 47% to $36.95 as of December 26, 2024. The stock held that price in January in hopes of a recovery in the automotive market, as the newly elected U.S. president, Donald Trump, had promised to make cars affordable to Americans.

While things overturned in February with the announcement of U.S. tariffs on Canada and Mexico exports, BlackBerry stock surged another 40% between February 3 and 18. Behind this rally was the completion of the sale of Cylance to Arctic Wolf. At this point, BlackBerry’s management had downsized the business. They only kept profit-generating businesses and offloaded loss-making businesses that needed high research and development (R&D) expenses.

Hence, it comes as no surprise that BlackBerry reported its first net income in a long time of US$2 million in the first quarter ended May 31, 2025. The stock jumped 12.5% after the earnings release on June 24 and has fallen 17.6% since then.

Throughout this journey, BlackBerry stock could not sustain its rally. Why?

BlackBerry’s valuation and growth mismatch

At a share price of $5.42, BlackBerry stock is trading at a price-to-sales ratio of 4.38, which is high for a company whose revenue has been falling. The company is dependent on QNX software to drive growth. Its other business, Secure Communications, continues to see churn rate as customers move to a cloud-based architecture.

How do the next two years play out for QNX?

Although QNX has secured several product wins with automotive customers, the overall automotive sector has been in a downturn after the 2022 semiconductor supply shortage. Car sales failed to pick up, but QNX royalty revenue continued to accumulate. At the end of FY25, the royalty backlog rose to $865 million from $815 million a year ago.

BlackBerry’s management has been waiting with bated breath to unlock this revenue, but it has been dragging on for four years. I have turned bearish on BlackBerry because it was not optimizing its QNX beyond automotive.

In the first quarter, the management stated that it will focus on diversifying QNX to General Embedded Market (GEM) applications, like robotics, industrial automation, and medical devices and equipment. Around 55% of its QNX pipeline in the first quarter of fiscal 2026 is in GEM.

The renewed focus on diversifying in GEM is welcome. However, it is better to adopt a wait-and-see approach to see if the GEM product mix converts into actual revenue or piles up in the backlog.

The only inflection point for BlackBerry will come when the QNX royalty backlog is unlocked.

How do the next two years play out for Secure Communications?

BlackBerry’s Secure Communications segment largely caters to governments, which have a lengthy decision-making process. On one hand, it has been losing business as companies move to the cloud. On the other hand, it secured Unified Endpoint Management deals from a broad spectrum of customers, including the U.S. Special Operations Command, U.S. Air Force, the U.K.’s Sellafield Nuclear Power Establishment and National Grid, the Qatar National Bank, leading U.S. Bank Oppenheimer, and the Netherlands government shared services.

This segment could help BlackBerry generate a minimum cash flow, as new contracts offset churn rate. However, I do not expect any significant growth in this space.

What can investors expect?

BlackBerry operates in a highly competitive market, and its product quality helps it enjoy strong goodwill. Fiscal 2026 will be the first full year of BlackBerry’s downsized core businesses on which it will focus. From this point, investors should closely monitor revenue growth, as it is where future upside will be realized.

I do not expect any more sudden growth triggers in BlackBerry’s share price as the tariff announcement doesn’t directly affect its stock price. It could see sustainable growth if the automotive market sees a recovery.

Fool contributor Puja Tayal has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Tech Stocks

data center server racks glow with light
Tech Stocks

Why AI Infrastructure Could Be Canada’s Hidden Asset Boom

Canada’s clean power and land could make it the backbone of AI’s growth, and Hut 8 offers an infrastructure-first way…

Read more »

A person's hand cupped open with a hologram of an AI chatbot above saying Hi, can I help you
Tech Stocks

Shopify Made a Transformative Deal With OpenAI: Is the Stock a Buy?

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) is an AI winner and shares might be too cheap to pass up given the growth catalysts in…

Read more »

Illustration of data, cloud computing and microchips
Tech Stocks

If You’d Invested $1,000 in Celestica Stock 5 Years Ago, This Is How Much You’d Have Now

A $1,000 investment in Celestica stock five years ago would’ve turned into over $45,000 – here’s what made that possible.

Read more »

space ship model takes off
Stocks for Beginners

1 Magnificent Canadian Stock Down 52% to Buy and Hold Forever

While its share price has taken a hit, this Canadian stock is executing well and still seems to have a…

Read more »

visualization of a digital brain
Tech Stocks

This Canadian Tech Stock Could Be a Global Leader, and Soon

Enghouse’s cash-rich, debt-free software model and 70% recurring revenue could quietly turn this Canadian niche player into a global compounder.

Read more »

top TSX stocks to buy
Tech Stocks

My 3 Top Growth Picks for December

For investors looking for more of a growth angle and to play any Santa Claus rally that may arise towards…

Read more »

stocks climbing green bull market
Dividend Stocks

The Best TSX Stocks for Canadians to Buy With $1,000 on Hand

Got $1,000? Three TSX compounders can kick-start long-term growth and add growing income.

Read more »

four people hold happy emoji masks
Tech Stocks

The 3 Best Growth Stocks to Buy in Canada Right Now for the Long Haul

Forget meme hype. These three Canadian growth stocks reinvest, compound, and can build wealth for decades.

Read more »