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Better Comeback Stock: BlackBerry vs. Unity Software

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BlackBerry (NYSE: BB) and Unity Software (NYSE: U) were both once high-growth tech stocks that lost their momentum and disappointed their investors. BlackBerry was once the world's top smartphone maker, but it lost that booming market to Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhones and Android-powered devices. It subsequently stopped producing phones and expanded its cybersecurity and Internet of Things (IoT) services, even as it struggled to keep pace with its faster-growing peers.

Unity's game-development engine was used to produce about half of the world's mobile, PC, and console games at the time of its initial public offering (IPO) in 2020. It also provided tools for monetizing games with in-app purchases and integrated ads. But over the following four and a half years, its growth was disrupted by Apple's privacy-oriented changes on iOS, macroeconomic headwinds for the advertising market, and tough competition from other game-development platforms like Epic Games' Unreal Engine.

Two investors study a trading screen.
Image source: Getty Images.

Over the past four years, BlackBerry's stock price tumbled nearly 60% as Unity's stock plunged more than 75%. Which of these stocks has a better shot at a comeback?

BlackBerry is running out of good options

After years of declining sales, BlackBerry stopped manufacturing its own phones in 2016 to focus on expanding its cybersecurity, IoT, and licensing businesses. It acquired Cylance in 2019 to strengthen its cybersecurity business, expanded its IoT segment by installing its QNX OS in more vehicles, and leveraged its patent portfolio to collect more licensing fees.

But from fiscal 2020 to fiscal 2024 (which ended last February), BlackBerry's annual revenue still declined from $1.04 billion to $853 million. It only slightly narrowed its annual net loss from $152 million to $130 million.

BlackBerry's big bet on cybersecurity didn't pay off. Instead, it struggled to keep pace with bigger and faster-growing competitors like Palo Alto Networks and CrowdStrike, and it faces some tough macroeconomic headwinds that are contributing to a drain in its cash reserves. In February, BlackBerry sold all of Cylance's endpoint security assets to Arctic Wolf for just $160 million in cash compared to its original purchase price of $1.4 billion. It also sold most of its patent portfolio over the past three years.

After those divestments, BlackBerry is going all-in on its IoT business. It expects the growth of QNX, which is already installed in more than 255 million vehicles worldwide, to drive its future sales. However, QNX still faces plenty of competition from similar real-time operating systems like VxWorks, FreeRTOS, and Microsoft's Windows Embedded.