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Verizon: An Undervalued Dividend Stock or a High-Yield Trap?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Verizon’s stock price has dropped nearly 30% over the past five years.

  • Its low valuation and high dividend yield should limit its downside potential.

  • But its core postpaid wireless phone business still faces formidable challenges.

Verizon Communications (NYSE: VZ) is often considered a reliable income stock. It's one of the largest telecom companies in America, and it's raised its dividend for 18 consecutive years. But over the past five years, its stock price declined nearly 30% as the S&P 500 advanced more than 90%.

Verizon's stock stumbled as it struggled to gain new wireless subscribers. But at $42 a share, it looks undeniably cheap at 9 times forward earnings and pays a hefty forward yield of 6.5%. Do that low valuation and high yield make Verizon an undervalued dividend play? Or is it a high-yield trap that will erase its own dividend gains with its declining stock price? Let's see if we can find some answers.

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A person using a phone in a cafe.
Image source: Getty Images.

What happened to Verizon over the past few years?

In 2024, Verizon generated 76% of its consolidated revenue from its consumer segment, which hosted 115 million wireless retail connections (83% of which were postpaid connections), 10 million broadband connections, and approximately 3 million Fios video connections at the end of the year. The rest of its revenue is mainly from its business segment, which provides a mix of wireless, wireline, networking, and security services to its commercial customers.

Over the past five years, Verizon's growth in postpaid wireless subscribers was sluggish as it struggled to keep pace with AT&T's and T-Mobile's lower prices and aggressive promotions. As Verizon's consumer business struggled, its business wireline segment floundered as more companies replaced their legacy ethernet networks and on-premise servers with wireless plans and cloud-based services. That's why its total revenue growth decelerated.

Metric

2020

2021

2022

2023

2024

Consumer Revenue Growth

(2.8%)

7.6%

8.6%

(1.8%)

1.3%

Business Revenue Growth

(1.5%)

0.3%

0.1%

(3.1%)

(2%)

Consolidated Revenue Growth

(2.7%)

4.1%

2.4%

(2.1%)

0.6%

Data source: Verizon.

In 2024, Verizon's consumer business stabilized as its total number of wireless retail postpaid subscribers grew 1.4% to 95.12 million. It attributed that growth to its localized incentives and marketing campaigns, the flexibility of its customizable "myPlans," and its fruitful distribution partnership with Walmart. Its ongoing promotions still squeezed its margins, but it offset that pressure by trimming its workforce and divesting its lower-margin businesses.