Upcoming BlackBerry Storm, Bold Smartphone Releases Please Analysts
The analyst day preceding Research In Motion's Wireless Enterprise Symposium,
which starts May 5 in Orlando, Fla.,
left a positive impression on Broadpoint AmTech analyst Mark McKechnie.
"We came away with increased comfort in the long-term story and believe
the May quarter is on track," McKechnie wrote in an investor update.
The first quarter of 2009 was also nicely "on track," as RIM
BlackBerry devices surpassed the Apple iPhone in consumer sales.
According to McKechnie, RIM management said cost reductions will be arriving
for its BlackBerry Storm and BlackBerry Bold smartphones, and there will be a
"mix shift to lower-priced but higher-margin Curve and Pearl
products."
No new products were announced to analysts, so it is presumed none will be
announced at WES, but McKechnie expects the
BlackBerry Niagara to arrive "fairly soon."
The BlackBerry Niagara-which early
testers have reviewed very favorably-is certain to face competition from the
Palm
Pre, set to debut soon, and one,
or possibly two, new iPhones that are expected to arrive in June.
RIM
announced on May 4 that AT&T will soon be offering the BlackBerry Curve 8900, and McKechnie reported, "We were
encouraged (but not surprised) by [AT&T's] announcement to carry the EDGE
8900 Curve phone in the 'summer.' We also note a continued preference by [RIM]
management toward supporting evolved EDGE [Enhanced Data for Global Evolution] for
emerging markets."
RIM reportedly suggested to analysts that inventory was, desirably, near an
all-time low. "[RIM's first-quarter] unit guidance of 7.5-8.0 [million]
units assumes no 'restock' in the channel, which may prove conservative and
thus represents upside to this quarter or next," wrote McKechnie.
McKechnie additionally reported that, with RIM's data traffic growing, he
anticipates a tripling of traffic on RIM's NOC
(Network Operations
Center) by 2010 and so an
investment in infrastructure expansion in 2010 to support subscriber and
data-per-user growth. GPS applications, RIM
told the analysts, are particularly big data consumers.
Finally, McKechnie noted that RIM's BlackBerry
App World, which debuted April 1, already carries 1,000 personal and
business applications, which can make use of RIM's push technology, and that
developers receive an 80 percent share of application sales, whereas developers
for Apple's App Store receive 70 percent.
In conclusion, McKechnie wrote, "We are encouraged by margin commentary and
lean inventories for the near term, and a longer-term road map for 'smart
appliances' in the enterprise."
For RIM's current quarter, Broadpoint estimated a revenue range of $3.3 billion
to $3.5 billion and subscriber additions ranging from 3.7 million to 3.9
million.
In addition to the BlackBerry Curve 8900 announcement at the WES
show, RIM announced projects and alliances with Hewlett-Packard
and Cisco
Systems.
