New York, February 2, 2026, 07:33 EST — Premarket
- Shares slipped 0.6% in premarket after surging 11.8% in the previous session
- Verizon is reportedly considering candidates to take over from consumer chief Sowmyanarayan Sampath, according to a report
- Investors are focused on leadership stability following a sharp rally sparked by turnaround signs and capital returns
Verizon’s stock dipped 0.6% to $44.25 in Monday’s premarket, following reports that the company is exploring candidates to replace its consumer business head. The shares closed at $44.52 on Friday. (MarketBeat)
The consumer unit powers wireless and home broadband, with U.S. carriers battling for customers line by line. Any shift at the top triggers investor scrutiny, as they weigh if Verizon’s recent subscriber gains can hold up amid a tougher pricing environment.
Verizon jumped Friday following upbeat profit and cash-flow guidance for 2026 and the unveiling of a $25 billion share buyback—the company’s first in years. (Reuters)
The Financial Times revealed that Verizon reached out to possible candidates recently to fill the role left by Sowmyanarayan Sampath, once considered the likely successor before Hans Vestberg’s departure and Dan Schulman’s takeover. According to the paper, no official interviews have happened yet, nor has the company engaged an executive search firm. (Financial Times)
Verizon reported adding 616,000 postpaid phone subscribers in the fourth quarter—those customers with monthly bills—and expects to boost that number to between 750,000 and 1 million in 2026. CEO Schulman, who came over from PayPal, told investors bluntly: “Verizon will no longer be a hunting ground for our competitors.” (Verizon)
U.S. stock futures dipped Monday following a steep drop in precious metals. Investors are digesting the news that Donald Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve, adding to market uncertainty. (Reuters)
Timing is key for Verizon, since its stock behaves as much like an income play as a telecom growth bet. Monday marks the payout date for its quarterly dividend of $0.69 per share. (Verizon)
Verizon is betting on a “convergence” strategy — bundling wireless with home internet — as it competes for premium subscribers against AT&T and T-Mobile US. At the heart of this plan is the consumer chief, who controls marketing, pricing, and retention efforts to tackle churn, the measure of customers walking away.
Leadership changes can go either way. A fresh team might act quicker on pricing discipline and customer service. Yet, a prolonged search or sudden exit could divert focus right when the company is pushing promotions and aiming to safeguard margins and cash flow.
Investors are waiting to see if the company responds to the report, as well as for the upcoming quarterly update on subscriber growth and cash flow. Verizon’s next earnings release is scheduled for around April 21, per earnings calendars. (Yahoo)