Better Telecom Stock: AT&T vs. Verizon

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Shares of AT&T (NYSE: T) and Verizon Communications (NYSE: VZ) are enjoying a resurgence in 2024 after hitting a 52-week low of $15.46 and $35.40, respectively, last November. Year to date, AT&T stock is up by more than 30% while Verizon is up by about 7% through Nov. 11.

In addition, both offer robust dividends. At their current share prices, AT&T's forward dividend yield is about 5% while Verizon's is more than 6%.

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With both stocks' performances improving compared to last year, and with both looking like solid sources of passive income, does one telecom titan make a better long-term investment than the other now? The answer isn't simply a matter of picking the one with the higher dividend yield.

AT&T and Verizon's strategic priorities

AT&T and Verizon have made growing their mobile wireless and fiber optic internet businesses their top priorities. These services are important because customers who buy both from one provider are less likely to switch to a competitor.

In Q3, AT&T's mobile wireless service revenue rose by 4% year over year to $16.5 billion, while Verizon's saw 3% growth over 2023 to $19.8 billion. Both are doing well expanding mobile service revenue, which is critical since it's their largest income source.

As for consumer fiber sales, AT&T achieved an impressive 17% year-over-year increase to $1.9 billion in the third quarter. Verizon's Fios-branded consumer fiber service produced $2.9 billion in Q3 revenue, which was essentially flat compared to last year.

Verizon's stagnant fiber sales might at first seem concerning, but in September, the company announced its intention to acquire Frontier Communications Parent. Frontier provides fiber internet service across 25 states, and generated $1.5 billion in Q3 sales, a 4% increase year over year.

The specter of debt

The Frontier acquisition promises to boost Verizon's fiber revenue, but the deal contains downsides. Frontier exited Q3 with more than $11 billion in debt.

Both Verizon and AT&T already carry massive debt loads -- $129 billion for AT&T and over $150 billion for Verizon, as of the end of Q3. That's a key factor in weighing the investment cases for these telecoms, because if either one lets its debt grow too large, it could affect dividend payments.

That's already the case for AT&T. It has kept quarterly payouts unchanged since its last increase in 2019, focusing instead on reducing debt and making capital expenditures to expand its 5G wireless and fiber optic networks. Verizon, by contrast, has provided investors with 18 consecutive years of annual dividend increases.