Merrill Lynch analyst Vivek Ayra has seen the light about the Blackberry Pearl. Based on strong-than-expected demand for the Pearl, Ayra has bumped up his 12-month target price on RIM to US$165 from US$135. His bullishness is based the imminent launch of a Cingular Pearl; a huge opportunity in Western Europe where smartphone sales are expected to grow 38% a year until 2010; low-cost monthly data plans such as T-Mobile's $19.99 all-you-can-eat package (Boy, it would sure be great to see those kind of deals in Canada but it's unlikely given how our wireless carriers have embraced "disciplined growth"); and the launch of new Pearl "siblings" such as the Indigo and Crimson, which will feature QWERTY keyboards (which is what will make me jump into a Pearl).
Speaking of smartphone growth, In-Stat has a new reported that shows unit sales nearly tripled from 2004 to 2005, and jumped by 50% during the first half of 2006. That said, In-Stat analyst Bill Hughes said there is reason for caution. "Many smartphone users continue to carry the very devices that smartphones are meant to replace. Also, users have been slow to add new applications to their devices. Most users have only downloaded a few applications." Tags: RIM, Blackberry, Pearl, Merrill Lynch, In-Stat
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Monday, November 20
by
Mark Evans
on Mon 20 Nov 2006 10:26 AM EST
by
Mark Evans
on Mon 20 Nov 2006 09:44 AM EST
These deals are getting a lot of coverage given the high-profile players involved but they should be viewed with a high degree of skepticism. How come? Well, striking deals is easy; making them work is a completely different thing. The newspaper industry, however, should get some credit for trying something different at a time when their operating and advertising models are under siege from online competitors. The big question is why weren't newspapers being as creative and aggressive much earlier? |
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