Spoiled on the vine? Is the Blackberry so rotted that it can never be picked? That’s not necessarily the prognosis on the Street – but investors are wary anyway. InvestorPlace called it “the zombie of Wall Street” Wednesday afternoon, with assistant editor John Divine saying that while it isn’t dead yet, “BBRY isn’t exactly living, either”. Hardly comforting words. But in the aftermath of Morgan Stanley’s downgrade of the once-soaring tech company from “equal-weight” to “underweight” it may be the best news we’ll hear on the subject for a while. “It’s been down from its high”, says Greg Capra, president and CEO of Pristine Trading, noting that Blackberry Limited’s neutrality is likely to continue to dog the troubled telecommunications company into the future. With uncertainty enveloping investors, he assures us that the possibility that shareholders may freeze in their tracks is a realistic one. The neutral label smacks of disappointment for a company that CEO John Chen has been working hard, with some success, to turn around. Up 35% this year, many aren't ready to give up on Blackberry just yet, despite the concerns that the company can’t meet the standards of a quickly modernizing market. Rather than rush to sell, Capra says, “better off to wait and see how this thing plays out.”