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BlackBerry lifts annual revenue forecast as QNX unit powers growth, shares rise

By Thomson Reuters Jun 25, 2026 | 6:09 AM

By Juby Babu

June 25 (Reuters) – BlackBerry raised its annual revenue forecast on Thursday, betting on continued momentum for its QNX division following the completion of ​its turnaround efforts, sending its Toronto-listed shares ‌up around 19%.

Once a powerhouse in the smartphone industry, BlackBerry has shifted its focus towards software for connected devices and self-driving vehicles over the past several years.

BlackBerry’s U.S.-listed shares also rose about 20% ‌in ​early trading.

BlackBerry’s QNX division, which provides ⁠secure real-time operating systems ⁠for mission-critical embedded systems most notably in the automotive sector, has maintained its strong growth trajectory, with revenue surging nearly 26% to $72.3 million during the first ​quarter ending May 31.

QNX has a backlog of almost $1 billion in future royalties.

“We see more of our QNX ⁠customers are leaning into next-generation ⁠software defined vehicles. They’re working with us ​closely to deploy our platform across the board to help ​them meet those needs, so we actually see really ‌healthy demand,” CEO John Giamatteo told Reuters.

BlackBerry now expects full-year 2027 revenue of between $594 million and $621 million, above its earlier projection of between $584 million and $611 million.

It forecast annual ⁠QNX revenue of $295 million to $312 million, compared with its previous range of $290 million to $307 million.

BlackBerry’s secure communications division, which encompasses ⁠encrypted voice, messaging ‌and critical event management solutions, reported a ⁠24% rise in revenue to $73.6 million.

A vast ​majority ‌of the secure communications business is government, ​and a ⁠significant portion of the pipeline is also government, CFO Tim Foote said.

The company posted total revenue of $152.9 million for the first quarter, up 26% from the same period a year earlier.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing ​by Anil D’Silva)