Investors piled into BlackBerry (NYSE: BB) on Monday morning after the company announced a deepened integration with the artificial intelligence (AI) behemoth – Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).
At Hannover Messe, the Canadian firm said it has reached an agreement to integrate its QNX OS for Safety 8.0 into NVDA’s IGX Thor platform, pivoting from its automotive stronghold into the burgeoning world of “Physical AI”.
BlackBerry stock has been a lucrative investment this month – currently up some 75% versus the start of April. However, significant risks remain that warrant considering trimming exposure to BB at current levels.
Cybersecurity remains an overhang for BlackBerry stock
While IoT and especially the QNX division has become a Wall Street darling, BlackBerry’s legacy cybersecurity business remains a drag on the firm’s overall performance.
Despite efforts to modernize its Cylance-driven suite, the division faces a “grueling uphill battle” against best-of-breed names like CrowdStrike and Microsoft.
According to recent data, the dollar-based net retention rate or DBNRR continues to struggle with staying above the critical 100% threshold, signaling the company is losing ground within its existing client base.
For an investor, this creates a tale of two companies: a high-growth robotics software firm shackled to a low-growth security business.
Until BB stock can prove that its cybersecurity segment has stabilized and can contribute to notably to bottom-line without heavy discounting, the overall margin profile remains vulnerable to erosion.
BB shares are no longer attractively priced
Following today’s surge, BlackBerry’s valuation has entered a territory that fundamental analysts describe as “priced for perfection”.
Trading at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of roughly 43x, it isn’t just trading at a huge premium to the broader North American software sector only, but is more expensive to own than NVDA itself.
BB’s current valuation assumes the Nvidia partnership will translate into immediate, frictionless scaling. However, history suggests the market often climbs a wall of worry but falls on a floor of reality.
At these levels, any minor guidance revision or a slight miss in the royalty backlog could trigger a violent de-risking event.
With an RSI in the early 90s indicating alarmingly overbought conditions, the risk-to-reward ratio in BlackBerry shares has become decidedly unattractive for new investors.
Long sales cycles in Physical AI
Finally, while the shift into Physical AI – humanoid robots and autonomous medical devices – is undeniably visionary, it introduces a timeline risk that momentum traders may be overlooking.
Unlike consumer software or even traditional enterprise SaaS, the industrial and medical sectors operate on glacial sales cycles defined by rigorous safety certifications and multi-year testing phases.
Simply put, a “design win” announced today in surgical robotics may not contribute a single dollar of high-margin royalty revenue until 2028 or 2029.
This creates a significant execution gap where BB shares have front-run the actual cash flow.
Investors must weigh the current hype against the reality that the company’s $950 million royalty backlog is long-term asset that can’t be liquidated overnight to meet short-term earnings estimates.
If the broader AI infrastructure trade cools, BlackBerry’s long-dated revenue promises may not be enough to sustain its current altitude.
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