NEW YORK, Jan 10, 2026, 15:54 ET — Market closed
- TMUS closed Friday at $200.56, up 1.34%
- T-Mobile USA priced $2 billion in long-dated senior notes, set to settle on Jan. 12
- The U.S. Supreme Court is set to decide on the FCC’s authority to impose privacy fines on carriers
T-Mobile US, Inc. shares climbed on Friday, buoyed by a strong market, reclaiming the $200 mark. The stock ended up 1.34% at $200.56, even as Verizon and AT&T slipped.
Investors are grappling with two key factors that can abruptly shift telecom stocks, often seen as slow movers: financing costs and regulatory risk. These issues linger quietly—until they suddenly don’t.
On the financing front, the company is raising debt through a long-term deal just as rate forecasts continue to drive equity multiples. Simply put, pricier refinancing could tighten future cash returns.
T-Mobile USA announced a $2 billion senior notes offering, splitting it into $1.15 billion of 5.000% notes maturing in 2036 and $850 million of 5.850% notes due in 2056. According to a pricing term sheet, the 2036 bonds carry a yield-to-maturity of 5.010%, while the 2056 notes are priced at 5.850%, which translates to 87 and 103 basis points above U.S. Treasuries, respectively. The proceeds will go toward refinancing existing debt and general corporate uses. The company expects to close the deal on Jan. 12. (CloudFront)
The U.S. Supreme Court has taken up a case questioning the Federal Communications Commission’s power to levy fines on wireless carriers for sharing customer location data without permission. This stems from about $200 million in FCC penalties handed down in 2024, including an $80 million fine against T-Mobile. A decision is anticipated by late June.
Markets reopen Monday, shifting focus back to rates and credit—the key drivers for telecom valuations. December’s U.S. CPI report drops Jan. 13 at 8:30 a.m. ET. Then, the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting follows on Jan. 27-28. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Traders are expected to hover around the $200 mark. Friday’s trading ranged narrowly between $196.27 and $202.09, a tight corridor that could prove important if headline-driven moves pick up early next week.
That setup can unravel quickly. A spike in Treasury yields or a widening of credit spreads could sour the bond market’s signal, even if the equity outlook stays steady. The FCC case isn’t a near-term earnings driver, but a Supreme Court decision upholding the agency’s approach might reignite debate over how tough regulators can get with penalties linked to customer data.
Investors face a key date: T-Mobile plans to release its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results on Feb. 11. On the same day, CEO Srini Gopalan and the leadership team will hold a Capital Markets Day event in New York, unveiling updated financial targets for 2026 and 2027.