After Earnings, Is Verizon Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued?
With soft cash flow and slowing phone upgrade trends, here’s what we think of Verizon’s results.
Verizon VZ released its second-quarter earnings report on July 22. Here’s Morningstar’s take on Verizon’s earnings and stock.
Key Morningstar Metrics for Verizon Communications
- Fair Value Estimate: $54.00
- Morningstar Rating: 4 stars
- Morningstar Economic Moat Rating: Narrow
- Morningstar Uncertainty Rating: Medium
What We Thought of Verizon Communications’ Q2 Earnings
- Second-quarter results were in line with our expectations overall, and we don’t believe the decline in the shares following the earnings release was warranted. Verizon continues to struggle to grow its consumer wireless customer base, a trend we expect will remain in place for the foreseeable future as market shares between the big three carriers gradually converge. Verizon’s “add a second phone number” service has created confusion around the numbers it reports, but we don’t believe this is cause for concern.
- Cash flow was a bit soft during the quarter, and management indicated that cash taxes will be higher than expected in 2024 than they anticipated coming into the year. We don’t think this reflects any issues with the firm’s long-term cash-generating potential.
- The slowing pace of phone upgrades has benefited Verizon’s margins and cash flow in recent quarters. There is talk that the new iPhone will drive an upgrade cycle, thanks to its new AI tools. If consumer demand is high and the upgrade rate accelerates, that would pressure cash flow in the near term, as receivables balances would expand. However, we expect device promotions to remain rational, in line with our expectation for wireless competition overall.
- Verizon’s shares still look attractive, trading at a 25% discount to our fair value estimate and a 6.6% dividend yield, which we believe is sustainable.
Fair Value Estimate for Verizon
With its 4-star rating, we believe Verizon’s stock is undervalued compared with our long-term fair value estimate of $54 per share, which is roughly 7.9 times our 2024 EBITDA forecast. Our valuation also implies an 8.2% free cash flow yield based on Verizon’s performance in 2023. Higher cash taxes and interest costs will likely offset business growth and lower capital spending in 2024, leaving free cash flow roughly flat for the year.
We expect Verizon will gradually lose postpaid wireless market share as it prioritizes pricing stability rather than growth. Smaller rivals T-Mobile and AT&T have similar network resources and should be able to attract roughly the same number of customers each quarter as Verizon. This parity should naturally cause the firms’ market shares to converge slowly. With a rational competitive environment allowing for stable service pricing and increasingly modest phone credits, we expect revenue per postpaid customer will grow steadily in the coming years.
Read more about Verizon’s fair value estimate.
Price vs. Fair Value History Chart
Economic Moat Rating
Verizon’s narrow moat stems from cost advantages in its wireless business and the industry’s efficient scale characteristics. The firm has organized its business along customer lines, but we believe it is best understood along wireless and fixed-line dimensions. The wireless business produces about 70% of service revenue but contributes nearly all of Verizon’s profits. We estimate wireless returns on invested capital were about 16% before 2021. With heavy investment to acquire additional spectrum in the C-band auction and subsequent spending to put that spectrum to use, we estimate wireless returns on capital have declined to the low-double digits, still leaving Verizon ahead of its cost of capital.
Verizon, AT&T T, and T-Mobile TMUS dominate the US wireless market, claiming over 90% of retail postpaid phone customers. Solid nationwide coverage requires heavy fixed investments in wireless spectrum and network infrastructure. While a larger customer base does require incremental investment in network capacity, a significant portion of costs are either fixed or more efficiently absorbed as network utilization reaches optimal levels in more locations.
Read more about Verizon’s economic moat.
Financial Strength
Verizon took on more than $65 billion of incremental debt in 2014 to finance the purchase of Vodafone’s 45% stake in the Verizon Wireless joint venture. Following that transaction, net debt increased to $106 billion, or 2.5 times EBITDA, prompting downgrades from the major credit rating agencies. At the time, management pledged to reduce leverage and reach its pre-buyout credit rating of A- within five years, which would have likely required net debt of less than 2 times EBITDA. The firm failed to meet this commitment, with dividends, acquisitions, and spectrum purchases offsetting cash flow.
Verizon paid dividends totaling $11 billion in 2023, equal to about 60% of free cash flow. Management expects net leverage to begin declining in 2024 as it uses excess cash to reduce net debt. We still don’t expect the firm to hit the high end of its leverage target until 2026 or 2027, depending on how much secured debt it issues.
Read more about Verizon’s financial strength.
Risk and Uncertainty
Our Medium Uncertainty Rating reflects the volatility we think Verizon investors face relative to our global coverage. Verizon primarily sees regulatory and technological uncertainties. Wireless and broadband services are often considered necessary for social inclusion in employment and education. If Verizon’s services are deemed insufficient or overpriced, especially in response to weak competition, regulators or politicians could intervene.
Recent media reports have highlighted potential risks related to lead-sheathed cables commonly deployed in telecom networks into the 1960s. The liabilities and costs associated with removing these cables, if deemed necessary, are unknown today.
Read more about Verizon’s risk and uncertainty.
VZ Bulls Say
- A focus on network strength over the past 15 years has put Verizon in an enviable position. Its wireless network provides the broadest coverage in the industry, and its reputation with customers is sterling.
- With the largest customer base in the US, Verizon Wireless is the most efficient carrier in the industry, delivering far better profitability than its rivals.
- Verizon is relentlessly pushing forward in its core business, expanding its fiber optic network and deploying 5G wireless technology.
VZ Bears Say
- Wireless technology is dramatically lowering the cost to build and maintain a network. Rival carriers have rapidly deployed new spectrum and technology to add coverage and capacity. Verizon’s network leadership is a thing of the past.
- Verizon’s fixed-line business is a disaster, earning minimal profits and facing years of high costs necessary to support these declining businesses.
- Verizon’s balance sheet isn’t the fortress it once was. Paying down debt will limit strategic flexibility and shareholder returns. Liabilities tied to lead-sheathed cable could add another headache.
This article was compiled by Leona Murray.
The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.