From early 2020 to mid-2025, Verizon’s stock has declined from approximately $60 to $41, a ~30% drop over five years. The performance has followed a clear L-shaped pattern: a sharp decline, followed by prolonged stagnation.
Key Drivers:
• $45B+ investment in C-band spectrum (2021) has produced limited revenue impact.
• Postpaid phone subscriber losses have persisted across multiple quarters.
• Environmental liabilities tied to legacy lead-sheathed cables have added legal and reputational risk.
• Rising interest rates and ongoing capex continue to pressure free cash flow.
• A dividend yield near 7% remains the stock’s primary support — not growth.
What to Watch Next:
Verizon’s upcoming earnings will be revealing. As in prior quarters, expect a focus on cost controls, non-GAAP metrics, and capital allocation optics. But the broader market has already priced in the story:
Absent real growth, financial engineering alone won’t move the needle.
If this quarter leans on narrative over fundamentals, we’re not looking at a turnaround — we’re looking at another chapter in Alice in Wonderland.