Today: 2 March 2026
Vodafone stock price dips after Amazon Leo satellite deal; VOD.L investors eye May results
2 March 2026
2 mins read

Vodafone stock price dips after Amazon Leo satellite deal; VOD.L investors eye May results

London, March 2, 2026, 09:42 GMT — Regular session

  • Vodafone dropped roughly 1% at the open after announcing a satellite backhaul agreement with Amazon Leo.
  • Vodafone is targeting 2026 for its first connected sites, launching in Germany before rolling out to Africa through Vodacom.
  • Investors are tracking execution, plus any signals on capex or cash flow, as they look toward FY26 results coming up in May.

Vodafone shares fell roughly 1% Monday, following news that the telecom company will tap Amazon’s low-Earth-orbit satellite network—Amazon Leo—to link up remote mobile locations throughout Europe and Africa. The stock moved to 113.4 pence, down from the prior close at 114.5, with prices fluctuating from 112.2 to 113.9 pence during the session. Google

This shift comes as investors continue to favor steady cash flow over far-off tech dreams. Even so, satellite connectivity is resurfacing—operators are looking to fill those stubborn coverage holes and make sure rural towers stay running where fiber either won’t reach or can’t be trusted to last.

Backhaul, the link that moves traffic from a mobile mast to the core network, tends to drive up costs in more isolated areas. Bringing satellites into play for part of that haul? That promises a cheaper build and a fallback path if the fixed line fails.

Vodafone plans to deploy Amazon Leo to link scattered 4G and 5G base stations back to its core network, using satellite backhaul capable of reaching 1 gigabit per second down and 400 megabits up. The company aims to connect its first sites in 2026, kicking off in Germany and elsewhere in Europe, with later rollout through Vodacom in Africa. Vodafone is pitching the service as a backup for when fibre lines go down—flooding included. “We’re looking to space to connect more mobile base stations,” CEO Margherita Della Valle said. Amazon Devices & Services’ Panos Panay called out that “Connectivity shouldn’t depend on where you live.” Vodacom’s chief, Shameel Joosub, said the partnership allows them to “swiftly deploy mobile connectivity in isolated areas.” Vodafone

European carriers are increasingly looking to add satellites into their mix—hedging against getting locked into a single vendor. On Monday, Orange said it’s teaming up with AST SpaceMobile and Satellite Connect Europe, the joint AST-Vodafone venture. Plans include running demos in Romania toward the end of 2026, showing off voice, SMS, and data over satellite. Reuters

Orange’s approach is “direct-to-cell,” so phones connect straight to a satellite. Vodafone’s deal with Amazon Leo, on the other hand, links cell towers to the network. Each targets a separate challenge. Their timelines don’t match up either.

Traders are watching to see if this remains just a pilot or if it ramps up quickly enough to alter build economics across rural Europe and some areas of Africa. Vodafone must also prove the service holds up in rough weather conditions, and crucially, that maintenance and equipment costs don’t wipe out the projected savings.

Still, modeling the pay-off isn’t straightforward. Satellite capacity comes with limits, and rolling out service hinges on ground infrastructure and launch windows. Operators must also deal with regulation and spectrum rules in every market they enter.

Eyes now turn to Vodafone’s FY26 numbers due May 12, with investors set to parse for hints on costs, spending plans, and management’s pitch around satellite-linked resilience and coverage. Vodafone

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