The Globe and Mail reports in its Saturday edition that BlackBerry has become almost invisible to consumers and investors, a trend they seem to favour. The Globe's David Berman writes that the share price has surged following quarterly results that indicate stability may be more valuable than visibility.
BlackBerry now delivers consistent performance mostly through its QNX division, which provides software for 275 million vehicles worldwide, replacing its previous volatile earnings. It also runs a cybersecurity division.
Total revenues have grown for three consecutive quarters, with a 10-per-cent increase in the fiscal fourth quarter year-over-year and 20 per cent at QNX. BlackBerry has reported positive net earnings for four consecutive quarters, indicating a potential rebound.
Consistency simplifies stock valuation using common metrics like the price-to-earnings ratio and boosts confidence in financial projections for the upcoming year.
The Wall Street Journal has taken notice of BlackBerry's turnaround, with a warm profile earlier this month.
As well, BlackBerry has garnered attention from tech heavyweights like Nvidia, Apple and Microsoft.
The bullish case for BlackBerry rests on consistency rather than a stunning rebound.
© 2026 Canjex Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.