Motorola Mobility ships 250,000 XOOM tablets in Q1; $3B in net revenues

Breaking

In the company’s first-quarter earnings disclosure, Motorola Mobility finally put a number on XOOM tablet shipments: 250,000. “The Company shipped a total of 9.3 million mobile devices, including 4.1 million smartphones and more than 250,000 Motorola XOOM tablets,” reads the report. “In the first quarter of 2010, the Company shipped 8.5 million mobile devices, including 2.3 million smartphones.” Motorola Mobility also posted $3 billion in net revenues, up 22% year-over-year, with mobile device revenues of $2.1 billion, up 30% year-over-year. The company did post a GAAP net loss of $0.27 per share, however, which was down from a $0.72 share loss in the first-quarter of 2010. Motorola’s complete earnings statement is after the break.

Motorola Mobility Announces First-Quarter Financial Results

April 28, 2011

First Quarter Financial Highlights

  • Net revenues of $3.0 billion, up 22 percent from first quarter 2010
  • GAAP net loss of .27 per share compared to .72 loss in first quarter 2010
  • Non-GAAP loss of .08 per share compared to .48 loss in first quarter 2010
  • Mobile Devices revenues of $2.1 billion, up 30 percent from first quarter 2010; GAAP operating loss of $89 million; non-GAAP operating loss of $61 million
  • Shipped 9.3 million mobile devices, including 4.1 million smartphones and more than 250,000 tablets
  • Home revenues of $904 million, up 8 percent from first quarter 2010; GAAP operating earnings of $53 million; non-GAAP operating earnings of $81 million
  • Positive operating cash flow of $107 million

LIBERTYVILLE, Ill. – April. 28, 2011 – Motorola Mobility Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: MMI) today reported net revenues of $3.0 billion in the first quarter of 2011, up 22 percent from the first quarter of 2010. The GAAP net loss in the first quarter of 2011 was $81 million, or .27 per share, compared to a loss of $212 million, or .72 per share, in the first quarter of 2010. On a non-GAAP basis, the net loss in the first quarter of 2011 was $25 million, or .08 per share, compared to a loss of $142 million, or .48 per share, in the first quarter of 2010.

In the quarter, the Company generated $107 million in operating cash flow, its seventh consecutive quarter of positive cash generation. Total cash of $3.3 billion at the end of the quarter includes cash, cash equivalents and cash deposits.

Details on non-GAAP adjustments and the use of non-GAAP measures are included later in this press release and in the financial tables.

“In the first quarter, we reached a major milestone in our history by becoming a new independent, public company. We enhanced our product portfolio by delivering compelling experiences with the launch of Motorola ATRIX™ and Motorola XOOM™, as well as offering unique end-to-end video solutions for the home,” said Sanjay Jha, chairman and chief executive officer, Motorola Mobility. “With a well-recognized brand, a strong balance sheet and industry leading intellectual property, we have the right assets to deliver an exciting pipeline of products, continue to grow our business and further improve our financial results.”

Operating Results

Mobile Devices net revenues in the first quarter were $2.1 billion, up 30 percent compared with the year-ago quarter. The GAAP operating loss was $89 million compared to an operating loss of $192 million in the year-ago quarter. The non-GAAP operating loss was $61 million compared to an operating loss of $148 million in the year-ago quarter. The Company shipped a total of 9.3 million mobile devices, including 4.1 million smartphones and more than 250,000 Motorola XOOM™ tablets. In the first quarter of 2010, the Company shipped 8.5 million mobile devices, including 2.3 million smartphones.

Mobile Devices highlights:

  • Introduced the award-winning Motorola ATRIX™, the world’s most powerful smartphone, with leading carriers around the globe. With Motorola’s innovative webtop application and smart accessories, Motorola ATRIX transforms into a mobile information and entertainment center, and enables a PC-like computing experience.
  • Introduced the award-winning Motorola XOOM™, the first tablet to use the Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) platform. In the U.S., Motorola XOOM launched with Verizon as a 4G LTE upgradeable device and Motorola XOOM with Wi-Fi launched with seven leading retailers in North America.
  • Announced four powerful new mobile devices specific to the China market – dual-core, Android 2.3 XT882 and MT870 plus MT620 and XT316.
  • Announced the acquisition of Three Laws Mobility, Inc. (3LM), a developer of mobile enterprise security and device management software for the Android operating system. Motorola plans to integrate 3LM’s technology into its smartphones and license the technology to other Android smartphone providers.
  • Home segment net revenues in the first quarter were $904 million, up 8 percent compared with the year-ago quarter. GAAP operating earnings were $53 million, compared to $20 million in the year-ago quarter. Non-GAAP operating earnings increased to $81 million from $47 million in the year-ago quarter. The Company maintained its leadership in key markets with set-top shipments up more than 20 percent as compared to the year-ago quarter.

Home highlights:

  • Leveraged Motorola’s 4Home managed services solution with the announcement of Verizon’s connected home services which offers home control and monitoring to FiOS subscribers.
  • Acquired Dreampark, allowing the continued expansion of the Company’s cloud-based Medios software suite and strengthening the Company’s ability to provide systems integrators, service providers, enterprises and content providers with innovative solutions for deploying converged media experiences.
  • Launched a new wireless video bridge solution, the VAP2400, enabling content distribution for the broadband home.
  • Achieved a world record for upstream speed using Motorola’s RX48 high-sensitivity DOCSIS CMTS receiver technology, a solution that enables operators to generate incremental revenue from their existing network.
  • Selected by HBO Latin America to upgrade its satellite network using MPEG-4 equipment for high-definition video service delivery.

Conference Call and Webcast

Motorola Mobility will host its quarterly conference call beginning at 5:00 p.m. (U.S. Eastern Time) on Thursday, April 28. The conference call will be webcast live with audio and slides at http://investors.motorola.com.

Use of Non-GAAP Financial Information

In addition to the GAAP results included in this presentation, Motorola Mobility also has included non-GAAP measurements of results. Motorola Mobility has provided these non-GAAP measurements to help investors better understand Motorola Mobility’s core operating performance, enhance comparisons of Motorola Mobility’s core operating performance from period to period, and allow better comparisons of Motorola Mobility’s operating performance to that of its competitors. Among other things, the Company’s management uses these operating results, excluding the identified items, to evaluate the performance of its businesses and to evaluate results relative to certain incentive compensation targets. Management uses operating results, excluding these items, because it believes this measurement enables it to make better period-to-period evaluations of the financial performance of its core business operations. The non-GAAP measurements are intended only as a supplement to the comparable GAAP measurements and the Company compensates for the limitations inherent in the use of non-GAAP measurements by using GAAP measures in conjunction with the non-GAAP measurements. As a result, investors should consider these non-GAAP measurements in addition to, and not in substitution for or as superior to, measurements of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP.

Highlighted items: The Company has excluded the effects of highlighted items (and any material reversals of highlighted items recorded in prior periods) from its non-GAAP operating expenses and net income measurements because the Company believes that these historical items do not reflect expected future operating earnings or expenses and do not contribute to a meaningful evaluation of the Company’s current operating performance or comparisons to the Company’s past operating performance.

Stock-based compensation expense: The Company has excluded stock-based compensation expense from its non-GAAP operating expenses and net income measurements. Although stock-based compensation is a key incentive offered to our employees and the Company believes such compensation contributed to the revenue earned during the periods presented and also believes it will contribute to the generation of future period revenues – the Company continues to evaluate its performance excluding stock-based compensation expense primarily because it represents a significant non-cash expense. Stock-based compensation expense will recur in future periods.

Intangible assets amortization expense: The Company has excluded intangible assets amortization expense from its non-GAAP operating expenses and net income measurements, primarily because it represents a significant non-cash expense and because the Company evaluates its performance excluding intangible assets amortization expense. Amortization of intangible assets is consistent in amount and frequency but is significantly affected by the timing and size of the Company’s acquisitions. Investors should note that the use of intangible assets contributed to the Company’s revenues earned during the periods presented and will contribute to the Company’s future period revenues as well. Intangible assets amortization expense will recur in future periods. Details of the above items and reconciliations of the non-GAAP measurements to the corresponding GAAP measurements can be found at the end of this press release.

Business Risks

Motorola Mobility cautions the reader that the risk factors below, as well as those on pages 13 through 34 in the Company’s 2010 Annual Report on Form 10-K and in its other SEC filings available for free on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov and on Motorola Mobility’s website at investors.motorola.com, could cause the Company’s actual results to differ materially from those estimated or predicted in the forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about future performance, and the Company’s financial outlook for the second quarter of 2011. Many of these risks and uncertainties cannot be controlled by the Company and factors that may impact forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to: (1) possible negative effects on the Company’s business operations, financial performance or assets as a result of becoming an independent, publicly traded Company, which may include: (i) diminished purchasing leverage and increased exposure to market fluctuations as a result of being a smaller, more focused Company, and (ii) potential negative consequences of licensing certain logos, trademarks, trade names and service marks, including “MOTOROLA” to Motorola Solutions, Inc.; (2) the economic outlook for the telecommunications and broadband industries; (3) the Company’s ability to improve the financial performance in its Mobile Devices business, including the success of its smartphone strategy; (4) Mobile Devices’ dependency on third-party operating systems and software, including Google’s Android operating system; (5) the level of demand for the Company’s products, particularly if customers defer purchases in response to tighter credit or as a result of the recent earthquake and resulting events in Japan; (6) the Company’s ability to introduce new products and technologies in a timely manner; (7) unexpected negative consequences from the restructuring and cost reductions; (8) negative impact on the Company’s business from global economic conditions and uncertainties; (9) the Company’s ability to purchase sufficient materials, parts and components to meet customer demand, particularly as we continue to assess the impact of the recent earthquake and resulting events in Japan; (10) risks related to dependence on certain key suppliers; (11) the impact on the Company’s performance and financial results from strategic acquisitions or divestitures, including those that may occur in the future; (12) risks related to the Company’s high volume of manufacturing in Asia and operations in foreign countries, including Brazil; (13) variability in income received from licensing the Company’s intellectual property to others, as well as expenses incurred when the Company licenses intellectual property from others; (14) unexpected liabilities or expenses, including unfavorable outcomes to any pending or future litigation or regulatory or similar proceedings; (15) the impact of foreign currency fluctuations, including the negative impact of a strengthening U.S. dollar on the Company when competing for business in foreign markets; (16) the impact on the Company from ongoing consolidation in the telecommunications and broadband industries; (17) the impact of changes in governmental policies, laws or regulations; (18) the outcome of currently ongoing and future tax matters; and (19) negative consequences from the Company’s outsourcing of various activities, including certain manufacturing, information technology and administrative functions. Motorola Mobility undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statement or risk factor, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

About Motorola Mobility
Motorola Mobility, Inc. (NYSE:MMI) fuses innovative technology with human insights to create experiences that simplify, connect and enrich people’s lives. Our portfolio includes converged mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets; wireless accessories; end-to-end video and data delivery; and management solutions, including set-tops and data-access devices. For more information, visit motorola.com/mobility.

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51 Comments
  • http://twitter.com/MrKow84 Kyle

    The Motorola Who ?

    • Anonymous

      I’ll translate it into something you’ll understand: the iXoom from iMotorola has shipped 250k units

      • Yes_iHave_a_iPhone

        That was funny hahaha

      • Anonymous

        Why did Motorola choose to tell us how many were shipped instead of how many were SOLD? What are they hiding?

      • Anonymous

        (polite golf clap). Well played, sir.

      • Anonymous

        ha moto dreams of having that little i in there name. That’s 250,000 would have happened in a day.

  • Anonymous

    But how many Xooms did they actually sell? Should be easy to figure out now. Go out and count the ones on the shelves. Subtract that number from 250,000

    • Generatione

      Bingo. “Shipped” not sold. Guess where all those unsold tablets go…

  • http://twitter.com/gadget_hero Patrick Kabir

    That wasn’t as bad as was being reported, not great still. Also I bet if they dumped Moto Blur and unlocked the bootloaders they would have sold a ton more smartphones, I had a Droid One, skipped the Droid Two. I am hoping the Droid 3 is good to go.

  • Anonymous

    Hurray for all the idiot analysts who were wrong, yet fueled by being published by bgr….

    • Joel

      Shipped 250,000 is very different than sold 250,000, will you learn how to comprehend what you read? Thanks.

    • Anonymous

      I doubt they sold more than 20% of their Xoom shipments. So sounds like the analysts were in the ballpark.

      • Joel

        I agree. Lets ASSUME they SOLD all 250,000. That equates to sales of 2,750 tablets a day, which is not impressive at all.

      • http://twitter.com/haze_blaze Haze

        Actually, those are pretty normal for pc sales…. If you did channel checks, you’d realize that there is not a high inventory of Xoom’s available in major cities… meaning that the sell-through is quite high. MUCH higher than 20% which is just ridiculous… if the product was selling that poorly, they would have refrained from shipping more (EOQ). It’s safer to assume actual sales in the neighborhood of 75-80% if not higher.

        And let’s not forget that Q1 ended before the European launch and official release of wifi versions as well. The Xoom is doing just fine.

    • Anonymous

      You should read a bit more carefully. If they’d sold 250K tablets they’d report that. They use the term “shipped” for a reason.

    • http://www.droiddoes.com/ Norm

      Of course iBGR was wrong. They are just trying to make Apple look better when in reality the Xoom 4G LTE is a far superior device that is open and free. The iPad 2 has been a failure so far.

      • Anonymous

        That post is like one of those picture puzzles in Highlights magazine: “Find 5 things wrong with this picture”.

        Norm, in a single paragraph, you betrayed everything you don’t understand about this topic. Well done, if only for the economy of expressing your personal ignorance.

      • Anonymous

        3,000,000 unit failure so far ..

  • http://twitter.com/stalkbrandon Brandon V. Fletcher

    guess they sold more than 85,000. #FUD

  • http://www.techhog.com Michael T. Blake

    Umm, that’s actually wrong Andrew. I’m not sure you actually read the report that you posted, in the press release it clearly states the following:

    “The Company shipped a total of 9.3 million mobile devices, including 4.1 million smartphones and more than 250,000 Motorola XOOM™ tablets.”

    The company SHIPPED, not sold 250,000 units. Which could clearly mean that they have SOLD around the presumed, 100,000 units.

    I’m just saying…

    • http://twitter.com/haze_blaze Haze

      Not likely. No corporation would continue to incur production costs for that much extra inventory, it’s cost prohibitive. Businesses run based on economics, not fanboy chatter. As new product lines go, the Xoom is doing quite well.

      Even compared to Apple’s top line iPad, the Xoom moved comparable units w/ one month of sales, in only one territory. If the wifi model sales just as well, Motorola will have made great inroads into the tablet market.

      • http://www.techhog.com Michael T. Blake

        Actually, the rate at which they are selling is not good. Because it is not that new of a market any longer. Lets look at the first iPad, released when no other tablet (like it) was even considered, yet it sold very well, selling out everywhere. Then Samsungs Galaxy Tab was released and while it was not as great as the iPads it still sold respectively, even breaking a million.

        To make your arguement even less valid, look at the sales of Asus’s Eee Pad transformer, it’s selling out, meaning there is a demand for it. The XOOM, while packing impressive stats is priced way to high and it killed the release.

        So you understand, I’m not an Apple fanboy, I’m unbiased when it comes to both Apple and Android, if you have ever read my site, you’d see that, so that is not my motive. My motive is to simply point out the truth and that is Motorola’s XOOM is not a success and will most likely be discounted soon, like the Atrix at Best Buy. Maybe then they will actually have better sales numbers and not shipped numbers.

  • Googleybear

    Shipped != sold. If my VZW store is any indication, they sold about 25 and the other 249,975 are still on the shelf somewhere.

    • Bringit

      Exactly. Next headline:

      BREAKING

      Stores ship 249,975 XOOM tablets back to Motorola Mobility in Q3.

      • Anonymous

        I’m sure they sold more than 25. I think about 235,000 will be sent back to recycling centers.

      • Bringit

        Fair enough.

    • Anonymous

      whoa 25. that’s actually more than I would’ve thought.

      breaking news: Motorola sells more than expected. Buy their stock!

  • Anonymous

    Wow, Motorola only lost about $80 million for the quarter. They must be loving Android for saving them.

  • Anonymous

    not exactly XOOMing off the shelves.

  • Max

    But but but but you RIM job morons called the xoom a failure? You idiots think that 7″ toy will sell this many all year? 400/state, morons.400

  • Anonymous

    That’s 249,998 more than the iPad 2!!

  • Guest

    Guy, please the 250K is just for the half month of March since this is just first quarter result.

    • Anonymous

      This POS came out a ways before the iPad 2. Motorola/Android still couldn’t capitalize on the iPad 2 delays.

  • Anonymous

    Hey, look – facts prove another clueless analyst wrong (You know – the one who said they only sold 100k as of two weeks ago.)

    • Anonymous

      Read the F Article one more time. There’s a key word in there that you are missing. If you see that word, let us know.

      In all likelihood, about 20-40K Xooms sold so far. It’s officially a FLOP.

      • Anonymous

        So in other words any numbers out there are still pure speculation and we don’t actually know how many sold? Fair enough.

        I do own one as I intend to develop for honeycomb. Also own a playbook. So far the playbook ui is better and apps crash far less often. Obviously the xoom has many more apps but a surprising number are fixed at pho e resolution.

        We’ll see what updates bring…

      • Anonymous

        We know that the number is far less than 250,000. Go into any Costco, and ask the mobile kiosk employee, and he’ll tell you they’ve sold about 10 of the 100 Xooms they got.

      • Anonymous

        Marc – do yourself a favor. Toss the Xoom and the Playbook into the trash can. Get an iPad and develop for it. That would up your chances by about 10,000,000,000 percent.

  • http://twitter.com/haze_blaze Haze

    Just admit you’re not very business savvy. The contribution margin on the Xoom would have to be astronomical from them to ship 250k units, having only sold 20-40k through to retail. More realistically, they would have sold closer to 200k through to retail.

    More importantly, that represents sales of only the higher-end model, only in the U.S. through Q1. Since then, they have launched the product in Europe AND released the wifi only model… Wifi only models account for OVER 60% of iPad sales. So that little tidbit is a big deal. Xoom sales are doing just fine ;-) .

    • Anonymous

      if they were doing just fine, they would have announced how many they SOLD, not shipped. Furthermore, even if they sold ALL 250,000, it still is a huge failure.

  • http://twitter.com/haze_blaze Haze

    Just admit you’re not very business savvy. The contribution margin on the Xoom would have to be astronomical from them to ship 250k units, having only sold 20-40k through to retail. More realistically, they would have sold closer to 200k through to retail.

    More importantly, that represents sales of only the higher-end model, only in the U.S. through Q1. Since then, they have launched the product in Europe AND released the wifi only model… Wifi only models account for OVER 60% of iPad sales. So that little tidbit is a big deal. Xoom sales are doing just fine ;-) .

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001686708587 Pierce Steele

    I have yet to see anyone anywhere with a Xoom. The starbucks by my house is packed with people on laptops, iPads, etc., not one Xoom has been spotted, where I work or anywhere else, and I’ve even seen someone with an HP Slate!

    • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AR6HpRLyzMY Walter Sobchak

      A bit anecdotal, but ok.
      Do you really expect to see anything but an ipad at Starbucks? That is Mecca for iHipsters.

  • sirpaul

    Key word: “shipped”

  • Anonymous

    when will mOto learn that pricing is everything . . . should have launched with the wifi only version and made it 599 from the start

  • http://infotainmentempire.blogspot.com Rob

    All of you people arguing semantics… so lame.

    Who cares? Shipped, sold, 250,000 isn’t a huge number, regardless of whether you like iOS or Android.

  • Mydragoon

    “Introduced the award-winning Motorola ATRIX™, the world’s most powerful smartphone, with leading carriers around the globe. ”

    what a laugh.

    i believe till today, atrix is officially only launched in US’s AT&T. what do they mean by ‘around the globe’?!?

    • http://www.techhog.com Michael T. Blake

      Not to mention, that sales have been so bad that Best Buy discounted it down to 29.99…ouch.

  • Sin City

    Motorola executives have previously said that the company would work to diversify its carrier partners beyond Verizon as a result of the Verizon iPhone–the Atrix for AT&T is part of that effort. During the company’s quarterly conference call, Jha said Motorola expects “important launches with Sprint as well,” but he did not provide details.

    ^Lol right, Motorola. This is exactly what you’re doing. BRB Let me read more on the Droid 3 that’s coming to Verizon, and see if it’s different from the Droid Bionic for Verizon.

  • Here to Educate

    Does anyone on here actually understand how every mobile company besides Apple, because they have their own store, gets f***ed over by the carriers. Yes, Moto should have released the WiFi only first or alongside the 3G/LTE model. However, I’m sure Verizon paid them a good amount of money so that they could increase their subscribers and hold of the WiFi only model. Also “shipped” for Motorola is a good thing. Have any of you taken a business class Moto would not just give the XOOMs to the retailers and not get paid. The retailers are the ones stuck with the inventory at this point not Moto.

    • Anonymous

      Most people understand that, but if retailers don’t sell through what they have, then guess what…yea, that’s right, they don’t buy anymore from Motorola. The Xoom would be a huge failure if all Motorola was able to sell were 250,000 units because retailers can’t sell through what they have.

      - VDubb

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