Instead, it intends to raise $1bn (£627m) in fresh financing.
Chief executive Thorsten Heins will step down and former Sybase chief executive John Chen will serve as interim chief executive.
Last month, Blackberry reported a second-quarter net loss of $965m.
Those losses were blamed on poor sales of its new smartphone, the Z10.
Fairfax was planning to lead a consortium of firms in a takeover of Blackberry worth $4.7bn.
But that plan, announced last month, has fallen through.
BlackBerry Ltd |
Last week, Reuters reported that Fairfax was struggling to raise the financing needed for the deal.
Instead, Fairfax, which owns a 10% stake in Blackberry, is contributing $250m to the new fund-raising.
"This financing provides an immediate cash injection on terms favourable to Blackberry, enhancing our substantial cash position," said Barbara Stymiest, chair of Blackberry's board of directors.
In September, the company announced a plan to cut 4,500 jobs, or 40% of its workforce, to reverse giant losses.
The interim chief executive, John Chen, acknowledged the challenge ahead: "Blackberry is an iconic brand with enormous potential - but it's going to take time, discipline and tough decisions to reclaim our success."
Some analysts remain sceptical about the firm's prospects.
"Now we're back to the downward spiral," said BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis.
"They've got $1bn more cash that buys them time. The drumbeat of negativity is likely to continue."
They shud beta sell off and cut their losses now b4 it gets worse.
ReplyDeleteBlack Berry messed up big time, they had a good thing but now its all dust
ReplyDeleteJust like ASUU
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