John Giamatteo
Analyst · CIBC. Please proceed
Thanks, Martha, and thanks to everyone for joining today's call. This past quarter marked a significant inflection point for BlackBerry. We delivered a solid top line performance for our IoT and Cybersecurity divisions, both of which exceeded the top end of our guidance ranges. This strong top line and continued focus on cost control and efficiency has enabled the company to pivot back to profitability recording both positive EBITDA and EPS in the quarter. BlackBerry was able to convert this profitability into a return to positive operating and free cash flow generation for the first time since Q3 of fiscal year 2022 when controlling for the impact of the Malikie sale last fiscal Q1. That means this is the first time in 12 quarters that BlackBerry has generated both positive operating and free cash flow. In fact, excluding the Malikie transaction, year-to-date for Q1 to Q3, operating cash flow is $136 million better this year than last. This strong performance illustrates just how far we've come as a company in the past year. In addition, as we announced earlier this week, we've signed a definitive agreement with Arctic Wolf for the sale of Cylance. This deal, which is subject to closing conditions, will quickly address the challenges of the Cylance financial profile and simultaneously further strengthen our balance sheet. This is a transformational move for BlackBerry that aligns with our clear strategic direction we outlined at our recent Investor Day and places the company on a strong trajectory going forward. So let me begin by reviewing what was another good quarter for our IoT division. IoT overcame the ongoing difficult backdrop in the automotive space to deliver revenue of $62 million above the top end of our guidance range. This represents 13% year-over-year and sequential growth. The strength this past quarter was predominantly driven by both royalties and development seat licenses. Automotive was the strongest performer led by revenue from both the digital cockpit and advanced driver assistance systems, or ADAS. In terms of design wins, the two largest this past quarter were with leading automakers. The first was with a German luxury automaker for the QNX hypervisor to form the foundation of a digital cockpit software stack on a next-generation chip set, that will be used across a full range of vehicles. The second was with one of Asia's largest auto OEMs for the QNX operating system to be deployed in the ADAS domain. We continue to see strong traction for our next-generation version of QNX operating system, SDP 8.0. Despite having only been launched earlier this year, prior to Q3, we had already secured a number of exciting partnerships and design wins. At Investor Day in October, we announced that more than 10 leading silicon vendors have already committed to supporting SDP 8. The momentum is absolutely building. This past quarter, we secured one of our largest ever gem wins with one of the leading industrial automation OEMs who elected to upgrade from version 7 to version 8. This design is for a high-performance OS to be used in a number of industrial use cases. The data point illustrates the significant market opportunity that we have in verticals outside of automotive. In fact, we made significant progress across medical, industrial and rail verticals. This past quarter, in rail, we secured a number of net new logos, including Universal Signaling and Progress Rail. We are also pleased with the customer reception of our QNX cabin offering. As a reminder, this is a platform that allows for QNX development in the cloud and the creation of a digital twin of a vehicle's digital cockpit. In the quarter, we made a huge step forward by securing an order for this subscription-based product from a major Japanese OEM. They will start by developing their next-generation cockpit with a cloud first approach to drive down time to market, as well as achieve scale and cost efficiency. In addition, we are continuing discussions with a number of other leading auto OEMs. I'm very proud of the results for IoT. This solid growth in the face of a challenging backdrop reflects QNX's strong position in the markets we address. Let me now move over to our Cybersecurity division. This was a really good quarter for Cyber as well. We delivered revenue of $93 million, exceeding the top end of our guidance range we provided last quarter. Cyber achieved 7% sequential revenue growth when including Cylance or 10% for the Secure Communications division that is UEM, AtHoc and Secusmart collectively. On a year-over-year basis, the division had a tough compare due to significant revenue relating to the large multiyear deal with the Malaysian government that we secured this time last year. Within the Secure Communications division, UEM endpoint management had a solid quarter, recording both sequential and year-over-year growth. We secured a number of wins this past quarter within our core government sector and also large deals with financial services. These included renewals and expansions with leading global banks, including German bank KfW. Other deals included the Scottish Police, Johns Hopkins University, and the Dutch Water Ministry. AtHoc also had a solid quarter. It continued to demonstrate its strong position in the U.S. Federal Government by securing a significant renewal and expansion with the Department of Homeland Security. Other wins included the U.S. Department of Justice. We're further strengthening AtHhoc's competitive position with a number of new product enhancements, including new alert approval workflows and native Android and iOS applications. Moving over to Secusmart, we've been pleased with our ability to grow outside of Germany where we leverage our software-based version of the product. However, Q3's solid performance was largely driven by some strong renewals within the German market, where we have strong relationships with a number of government agencies. The annual recurring revenue, or ARR metric for cybersecurity including Cylance remained largely stable recording a small sequential increase and a 3% increase on a year-over-year basis to $281 million. For Secure Communications that is excluding Cylance, the increase was even more pronounced where ARR increased by 3% sequentially and 8% year-over-year to $215 million. The dollar-based net retention rate, or DBNRR for cybersecurity continued to improve increasing by 2 percentage points sequentially and 8 percentage points year-over-year to 90%. Similar to ARR, DBNRR for Secure Communications division is much stronger. The dollar-based net retention rate for this past quarter was 95%. So, in summary, this was a really solid quarter for the cybersecurity division where we beat expectations. As we head towards the close of the Cylance deal with Arctic Wolf, we are focusing our attention on the operational strategy for our Secure Communications business and maximizing the growth engines within it. Turning now briefly to IP licensing, revenue came in slightly better than guidance at $7 million, which drove a sequential improvement in gross margin to 71%. This revenue continues to relate largely to legacy deals that predate the sale of our non-core portion of the portfolio to Malikie. So, bringing this all together, this past quarter, BlackBerry delivered revenue of $162 million, exceeding the upper end of the previously provided guidance range. Total company gross margins improved both sequentially and year-over-year to 74%. With that, let me now turn the call over to our CFO, Tim, who will provide further details on our financials.