New York, Jan 31, 2026, 16:53 EST — Market closed.
- AT&T shares climbed 4.3% on Friday, outpacing a weaker overall market.
- Verizon’s blowout earnings gave the U.S. telecom sector a strong push heading into the weekend.
- The U.S. jobs report due next week will be the immediate macro test for rate-sensitive, high-yield stocks.
AT&T Inc. shares climbed 4.3% to close at $26.21 on Friday, even as the S&P 500 and Dow each slipped 0.4%. Verizon surged nearly 12%, while T-Mobile added around 4%, pushing the telecom sector into rare outperformance. (MarketWatch)
After the bell, AT&T slipped to $26.11, shedding 0.4% in after-hours trading and giving back a bit of the day’s advance. (Yahoo Finance)
The outperformance is crucial now as telecom is once again viewed as a cash-flow play — a safe spot when growth stocks falter — and Friday’s action thrust the sector back into focus ahead of a week packed with data.
Verizon carried most of the load. The company reported better subscriber growth and detailed cost and capital strategies that propelled its shares to the largest one-day surge since 2008, lifting rival stocks along with it. (The Wall Street Journal)
Macro data came in mixed. Producer prices increased 0.5% in December, while services prices jumped 0.7%, a stronger-than-expected rise that could keep investors uneasy about future interest rate moves. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
AT&T remains buoyed by its recent earnings and guidance. CEO John Stankey noted in a company statement earlier this week, “We achieved or surpassed all of our consolidated full-year guidance for 2025.” (AT&T Newsroom)
The company also ramped up capital returns. CFO Pascal Desroches announced on the earnings call that “Our Board has authorized an additional $10 billion of share repurchases,” complementing a plan that already calls for about $8 billion in buybacks in 2026. (AT&T Investor Relations)
Investors find the pitch simple: reliable subscription income, substantial network investments already in the pipeline, and leftover cash — known as “free cash flow,” after covering operating expenses and capital outlays — to fund dividends and share buybacks.
Yet the trade could shift quickly. The partial U.S. government shutdown starting early Saturday might shake markets in the coming week. Telecom remains vulnerable, too—price wars or rising churn might push carriers to boost spending just to hang onto customers. (Barron’s)
The key date to watch is the U.S. employment report for January, set for release on Feb. 6. It has the potential to shift rate expectations, impacting dividend-heavy sectors like telecom. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Investors are set to parse the Fed’s latest signals, with minutes from the January meeting dropping on Feb. 18. (Federal Reserve)
AT&T investors head into Monday hoping for a clear sign: was Friday’s telecom rally just a short-lived reaction to Verizon’s results, or the beginning of a wider rotation that can sustain itself as rates and risk appetite evolve?