@OP
For years, Verizon quietly pulled in ~$2.2 billion a year by serving as the wholesale network for Charter and Comcast’s mobile offerings. Pure margin, no customer service costs. Clean, predictable, and high-return.
Then leadership decided to cap how many lines cable partners could activate. A power move. One meant to assert control.
Instead, it blew up the deal.
Comcast and Charter walked—right into T-Mobile’s arms. In doing so, they handed Verizon’s rival a convergence we-pon: wide retail reach from cable + nationwide 5G backbone from T-Mobile. Verizon didn’t just lose a client—it built a competitor.
And let’s be clear: this isn’t small change. That MVNO relationship made up ~1.7% of total revenue but a stunning ~10% of free cash flow. In a company like Verizon, where every billion in FCF fuels dividends, debt service, and long-term investments—that loss is massive.
To cover the gap, they’ll double down on Visible—their own low-cost brand that’s now quietly cannibalizing postpaid retail. Customer counts might stay flat, but ARPU and brand loyalty won’t. It’s margin dilution masked as innovation.
Meanwhile, frontline talent is walking. Institutional knowledge is being replaced with dashboards and PowerPoints. And every quarter, we hear the same script: “efficiency,” “AI,” “transformation.” But what exactly is being built?
Because from here, it doesn’t look like growth.
It looks like a retreat, repackaged for Wall Street.
The MVNO fallout didn’t just shrink the balance sheet—it exposed the deeper problem: no clear plan forward.
If there is one, now would be a good time to show it.