In the past few months, the investors of Research In Motion Ltd (NASDAQ:BBRY) have seen their share of drama. The stock has fluctuated massively during this time on BB10 news. The market was expecting that BB10 would be launched in the US along with the rest of the world at the end of January. However, the company has held-back on the US launch, but BB10 has been launched in 50 countries all around the world.
BB10
There is still a lot of speculation on the actual success of the new BB10 devices. The market is pretty divided on sales estimate that is also reflected in target prices of Research In Motion Ltd (NASDAQ:BBRY) stock. The company launched the Z10 and Q10 in the UK last month. The devices are now available in over 50 markets all around the world and have seen a positive response from consumers. The response has been particularly strong in UK, UAE and Canada. According to ComScore Inc at the end of 2012 BlackBerry had a 6.4% market share of the US market and Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG)’s Android was leading the race with 53.4% market share.

Sales estimates
There are huge variations in the initial sales estimates for BB10 handsets. The market was expecting the device marker to sell approximately 1.75 million devices by Mar. 2. These estimates have been significantly revised down by analysts, according to reports. More recent estimates indicate that BB might have sold only 300,000 devices in the given time frame. This is being blamed on lower than expected demand and limited availability. The devices have still not been launched in the largest high-end smartphone market of the world, i.e. the Unites States.
It is also speculated that only 1-1.5 million Z10 units were shipped as compared to 3-4 million initially expected by the industry. According to Pacific Crest, the sales of Z10 would also cannibalize the sales of Bold 9900. The market has reacted to this speculation, and the company’s stock has declined 22% from the post launch rally.
Competition
Nokia Corporation (ADR) (NYSE:NOK)’s turnaround efforts are also hinged on the success of its Lumia line. The market was expecting Lumia to sell around 6-7 million units during the quarter ended December. The smartphone giant only managed to sell around 4.4 million Lumia devices in the given period. This was only because the results didn’t indicate the full quarter figures and the devices were not available in some of their biggest consumer markets. The situation is pretty similar for BB10 devices and the market should not write them off based on initial data.





