Despite efforts to diversify into more stable business lines, Kanata-based Quarterhill said Thursday that the highly variable nature of its WiLAN patent licensing division pulled down its first-quarter earnings.
Quarterhill reported a loss of US$12.1 million and revenues of US$12 million in the three-month period that ended March 31.
It’s difficult to compare those figures to the company’s performance a year earlier, as the firm was a significantly different entity in the first quarter of 2017.
OBJ360 (Sponsored)
A new strategic affiliation between Stratford Intellectual Property and North IP aims to enhance the ways Canadian companies protect, manage, and utilize their intellectual assets. This collaboration combines Stratford’s expertise
Giving Guide: Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ottawa
What we do Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ottawa (BBBSO) enables life-changing mentoring relationships to ignite the power and potential of young people facing adversity. We carefully and intentionally place
Last year, WiLAN said it was changing its name to Quarterhill and expanding into the Industrial Internet of Things market with acquisitions of software and services provider Viziya as well as International Road Dynamics, a transportation infrastructure tech firm.
However, the company said the uneven results from its WiLAN division, which generates revenues based on patent licensing agreements and litigation awards, continue to affect its quarterly results.
“(Our) financial results in Q1 reflect the variability inherent with WiLAN,” said Quarterhill president and CEO Doug Parker in a statement. “While we know the variability can also help this business, as it did in Q3 of last year, as we’ve stated in the past, WiLAN’s performance is best judged over a longer period of time as opposed to quarter-to-quarter.”
After releasing its financial results, Quarterhill’s shares dropped 7.6 per cent at the opening bell on the Toronto Stock Exchange before making up some of the lost ground to end the trading day down 6.6 per cent, or 13 cents, to $1.85.