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BlackBerry maker RIM’s stock drops after profit plummets 71%

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The long slide of BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. continued Thursday as the company reported a 71% drop in profit compared with the same quarter last year.

The Ontario, Canada-based smartphone maker has seen misses pile up faster than hits in recent years, including its much-hyped BlackBerry PlayBook tablet, a competitor to Apple’s iPad that has been unable to gain traction with consumers. The company resorted to slashing the PlayBook’s price to $199 from $499, a decision that cost it hundreds of millions of dollars.

RIM said it shipped 150,000 PlayBooks during its third quarter, which ended Nov. 26. As a comparison, Apple sold close to 11 million iPads in its most recent quarter, which ended Sept. 24.

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“The last few quarters have been some of the most trying in the recent history of this company,” said James L. Balsillie, the company’s co-chief executive, adding that “we recognize that our shareholders may feel we have fallen short in terms of product execution, market share and financial performance.”

RIM’s stock, which closed at $15.13, up 5 cents, dropped $1.16, or nearly 8%, to $13.97 in after-hours trading. The stock price is down nearly 75% since the beginning of the year.

The company shipped 14.1 million BlackBerry devices in the quarter and said that despite other troubles, the number of BlackBerry subscribers rose 35% to nearly 75 million worldwide.

RIM reported $270 million in profit during the quarter, down 71% from the same quarter last year, when the company earned $911 million. Its revenue of $5.2 billion dropped 6% from the year-earlier quarter.

david.sarno@latimes.com

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