AT&T highlighted acquisitions and growth. T's recent deals, including the EchoStar acquisition, temporarily slow debt progress. Legacy business decline continues to materially offset new business growth.
If you're comfortable with bottom-fishing (or even catching falling knives) to get a high-yielding dividend stock alongside outsized turnaround potential, there are plenty of names that have fallen well below the $20 per-share mark to consider nibbling away at in the fourth quarter.
AT&T has delivered another quarter of strong financial performance, marked by robust wireless and broadband share gains to keep its recently raised FY 2025 guidance intact. The results highlight an effective convergence strategy, as subscription gains are complemented by earnings accretion. This demonstrates a balanced act in utilizing promotions against rising competition and ensuring ARPU resilience. Despite concerns over AT&T's recent $5 billion debt issuance and the EchoStar spectrum license acquisition, its deleveraging efforts and balance sheet stability remain intact, with net debt-to-EBITDA trending lower.
While the top- and bottom-line numbers for AT&T (T) give a sense of how the business performed in the quarter ended September 2025, it could be worth looking at how some of its key metrics compare to Wall Street estimates and year-ago values.
AT&T (T) came out with quarterly earnings of $0.54 per share, missing the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.55 per share. This compares to earnings of $0.6 per share a year ago.
The company has made a push to offer more customers both fiber and wireless services and says the move is paying off. Analysts will be monitoring the impact of promotions.
AT&T revenue advanced in the third quarter, despite lower-than-expected phone sales in its mobility business.
T rolls out FirstNet Fusion, aiming to redefine public safety communications amid intensifying competition in the sector.
Get a deeper insight into the potential performance of AT&T (T) for the quarter ended September 2025 by going beyond Wall Street's top-and-bottom-line estimates and examining the estimates for some of its key metrics.
AT&T has doubled its stock price since 2023, driven by network modernization and a renewed focus on core telecom operations. T is aggressively expanding its 5G and fiber networks, aided by strategic spectrum acquisitions and favorable tax incentives from recent legislation. Despite a saturated market and substantial debt, T's strong free cash flow, robust dividend yield, and infrastructure moat support its investment case.
AT&T Inc. offers a more compelling total shareholder yield than Verizon Communications Inc., despite VZ's higher headline dividend yield. T's aggressive debt reduction and recent share buybacks significantly enhance its total shareholder return versus VZ's more modest improvements. While T trades at a valuation premium on P/E, debt-adjusted metrics narrow the gap.
AT&T (T) closed the most recent trading day at $25.6, moving 1.06% from the previous trading session.