BlackBerry (BB) announced at Hannover Messe that its QNX OS for Safety 8.0 will integrate with Nvidia’s (NVDA) IGX Thor computing platform.
The deal deepens a collaboration that started in mid-2025, when the two companies first teamed up on autonomous vehicle safety systems.
This time, the scope is wider. The new agreement targets physical AI applications — industrial automation, medical devices, and robotics — areas where safety-certified operating systems are a hard requirement.
QNX is a real-time OS used in automobiles, medical equipment, and industrial machinery. It became the core of BlackBerry’s business after its smartphone division collapsed in the 2010s.
BlackBerry Limited, BB
BB stock jumped 13.2% on Monday and tacked on another 3.6% in aftermarket trading. The stock is now up around 75% since the start of April.
The QNX division has become something of a Wall Street favourite. Embedding QNX into Nvidia’s IGX Thor opens the door to a growing number of AI-powered physical systems — think surgical robots and autonomous industrial machines.
BlackBerry holds a $950 million royalty backlog tied to these long-term contracts. That’s a real asset, and it reflects the depth of QNX’s reach across safety-critical industries.
The Nvidia name doesn’t hurt either. Any company with a deepening tie to NVDA’s AI infrastructure stack tends to attract attention fast.
Not everyone is buying the rally at face value.
BlackBerry is now trading at around 43x forward earnings — a higher multiple than Nvidia itself. That’s a lot of optimism priced in for a company still carrying a struggling cybersecurity division.
The Cylance-driven security business continues to lose ground. Its dollar-based net retention rate is sitting below 100%, meaning the company is shrinking within its existing customer base — not a healthy sign.
The RSI is sitting in the early 90s, deep into overbought territory. That kind of reading typically signals a stock has moved faster than the underlying fundamentals can justify.
There’s also a timeline issue. Physical AI — humanoid robots, autonomous medical devices — runs on long sales cycles. Safety certifications and multi-year testing phases mean a design win announced today might not generate revenue until 2028 or 2029.
That gap between the announcement and actual cash flow is something investors don’t always price in correctly.
The $950 million royalty backlog is real, but it’s a long-term asset. It won’t show up on next quarter’s earnings call.
At Monday’s close, BB was trading at levels that leave little room for error. Any guidance miss or slowdown in royalty conversions could hit the stock hard.
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