BlackBerry Ltd is abandoning a plan to sell itself and instead will replace its chief executive officer and raise about $1 billion from institutional investors, including its largest shareholder, the smartphone maker said on Monday.
Shares of BlackBerry dropped 16.3 per cent to $6.50 in premarket trading. The company said it would raise the money with a private placement of convertible debentures.
John Chen will be appointed executive chairman and will be interim CEO while the company looks for a new leader. He is the former CEO of Sybase, a database software company that SAP AG acquired in 2010.
Chen
joined private equity group SilverLake as senior adviser last year.
BlackBerry grew from a small technology start-up into a multibillion-dollar company by pioneering on-the-go email, but it has lost much of its market share to Apple Inc's iPhone and devices that run Google Inc's Android software.
BlackBerry's largest shareholder, Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd, will buy $250 million of the debentures. BlackBerry said the subordinated debentures would be convertible into common shares at $10 and have a seven-year term.
Fairfax announced a tentative $9-a-share offer for Waterloo, Ontario-based BlackBerry in late September. But Reuters said on Friday that Fairfax was struggling to finance the $4.7 billion bid.