Toronto, June 7, 2026, 10:02 EDT
BlackBerry Limited shares gave up ground Friday, reversing sharply after a rough week. The move came as tech stocks slid, catching a name that had seen one of the stronger rallies in software lately.
U.S.-listed shares settled at $9.41 on Friday, falling 8.99%. That comes after the stock traded up to $10.93 the day before. Shares still ended the week about 4.6% higher than their May 29 close at $9.00, suggesting profit-taking was the main factor in the pullback rather than a clear end to the rally. Shares in Toronto wrapped up Friday at C$13.08, off 9.17%.
That’s important because BlackBerry’s price isn’t tied to its phone days anymore. Now, investors are looking at QNX, the real-time OS that runs key functions in cars and machines where slowdowns are expensive. Secure communications, with a big push into government and regulated sectors, is the other main bet.
Weekend trading pause shifts things. As markets reopen Monday, investors will be watching BlackBerry to see if the May-June run continues, and keeping an eye on whether Friday’s tech slide carries over.
Markets slumped Friday, with more than just BlackBerry feeling the heat. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 4.18%, the S&P 500 shed 2.64%, and the Dow ended down 1.35%. Fresh U.S. jobs numbers dialed up investor worries that the Federal Reserve might keep policy tight. “The dam just broke today,” Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, said to Reuters. Reuters
Shares of related software and automotive tech firms were under pressure. CrowdStrike slid 6.7%, Palo Alto Networks dropped 2.5% and Mobileye tumbled 10.2% during the latest U.S. trading. BlackBerry’s 9% loss put it near the higher beta end of the category. High beta stocks often move more than the wider market, up or down.
BlackBerry has put the stock back in focus for investors. Reuters said in April that QNX revenue jumped 20% to $78.7 million for the fiscal fourth quarter. The royalty backlog for the unit, or expected future royalty revenue from customer programs, reached about $950 million. CEO John Giamatteo called BlackBerry’s products “mission-critical solutions,” a phrase investors often take to mean the company’s software is less easily swapped out than standard enterprise tools. Reuters
BlackBerry splits into Secure Communications and QNX, according to its own website. The company says QNX is in over 275 million cars around the world. That puts the stock in the mix for auto software spending, but also links it to the speed of production and engineering budgets, which can lag.
Few companies have major news set for this week, but BlackBerry’s investor site points to June 25 for fiscal Q1 2027 results. The company usually puts out an earnings-call notice about two weeks ahead, so traders will be looking for formal confirmation soon.
Stock may have moved up faster than actual numbers support. June’s update will need to show QNX is bringing in real revenue and cash, or rate worries could mean more selling in high-growth software names. If that happens, Friday’s drop could go beyond a quick correction. The bear case is that a pricey turnaround bet hits a tougher market.
BlackBerry heads into Monday with mixed signals. Shares dropped with tech, yet the stock managed to finish the week up. Now the question is if Friday’s move gets shrugged off or if it signals trouble for a rally that may have gotten ahead of itself.