The maker of the BlackBerry said on Friday that it wants US and Canadian regulators to investigate a “false and misleading” report by a financial analyst that claims the company’s new smartphone is being returned in unusually high numbers.
Thorsten Heins, the CEO of Research In Motion Ltd (RIM), said returns of the new BlackBerry Z10 are in line with industry norms. In a statement on Friday, Heins said Thursday’s report from research and investment firm Detwiler Fenton has to be challenged because it is either a complete misreading of the data or a willful manipulation.
“The data we have collected from our retail and carrier partners demonstrates that customers are satisfied with their devices,” Heins said.
Anne Buckley, general counsel and chief compliance officer with Detwiler Fenton, said the firm is confident in its research methodology and welcomed any regulatory inquiry.
The BlackBerry, pioneered in 1999, had been the dominant smartphone for on-the-go businesspeople and other consumers before the iPhone debuted in 2007 and showed that phones can handle much more than e-mail and telephone calls.
After numerous delays, RIM is attempting a comeback with phones running its new BlackBerry 10 system. The Z10 is the first of those devices.
“Key retail partners have seen a significant increase in Z10 returns to the point where, in several cases, returns are now exceeding sales, a phenomenon we have never seen before,” the Detwiler Fenton report said.
It said the biggest customer complaints are the “unintuitive nature of the user interface, the maps app and the lack of apps.”
“Detwiler Fenton is not the only research provider publishing similar reports regarding customer reactions, sales, and returns of the Blackberry Z10,” Buckley said in a statement.
She also said that neither the research analyst nor any officer or director of Detwiler Fenton has any financial interest in RIM.
RIM’s stock fell nearly 8 percent on Thursday after the report came out. The stock was up US$0.12, or nearly 1 percent, to US$13.67 in midday trading on Friday.
Verizon Wireless, the largest wireless carrier in the US, also refuted the claim of a large number of returns. Verizon spokeswoman Brenda Raney said in an e-mail that “after the first 14 days, the quality performance of the Z10 has been in line with similar devices we’ve launched.”
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