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Monday, May 28, 2012

Motorola Phone Shipments Slip as Loss Widens

Hands On: Motorola Droid 4 and Droid RAZR MAXX

Motorola Mobility reported a net loss for the first quarter of 2012 that widened compared to a quarter ago, and the number of mobile devices the company sold shrank.

Motorola reported a net loss of $86 million on revenue of $3.1 billion for the quarter, with an operating loss of $98 million. Revenue grew 2 percent compared to a year ago, when Motorola lost $81 million.

The one bright spot? Smartphone sales, which grew by 24 percent to 5.1 million. However, the number of total mobile devices that Motorola sold dropped by 4.3 percent from a year ago to 8.9 million units. Motorola did not disclose the number of tablets it sold.

Motorola's loss casts a pall over the company's acquisition by Google, which has been approved by regulatory agencies but has yet to formally close. That timetable is now set for the middle of 2012, Motorola executives said. Because of the pending acquisition, Motorola did not hold a conference call.

Meanwhile, China is the most recent country to ask for more information about the deal, as well as a district court overseeing patent litigation between Apple and Motorola. "Motorola Mobility and Google continue to work closely with the authorities in China for approval on the acquisition," Motorola said in a statement.

However, the Department of Justice and the European Commission have approved the $12.5 billion merger.

Possibly, that's because Motorola's poor showing may mean the deal does not pose a threat to competition. Motorola did not crack the top five in an IDC report of the top smartphone manufacturers on Tuesday. Motorola trailed Samsung, Apple, Nokia, RIM, and HTC.

Sanjay Jha, the chief executive of Motorola, took a positive view.

"The introduction of RAZR MAXX marked another successful addition to the Motorola product family and contributed to our growth in smartphones," Jha said in a statement. "Our Home business delivered another solid quarter highlighted by improvement in year-over-year profitability. We continue to work closely with Google to complete the proposed merger during the first half of the year."

Motorola's Mobile Devices segment lost $121 million for the quarter, versus a loss of $89 million last year. Revenues were $2.2 billion, up 3 percent.

Motorola's Home segment, however, reported operating profits. The segment reported operating earnings of $68 million on revenue of $884 million, down 2 percent year-over-year. Earnings were $53 million last year.

For more from Mark, follow him on Twitter @MarkHachman.

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