Today: 5 June 2026
Verizon Stock Just Got Hit Hard. The Dividend Story Is Only Half the News
5 June 2026
2 mins read

Verizon Stock Just Got Hit Hard. The Dividend Story Is Only Half the News

New York, June 4, 2026, 19:00 EDT

Verizon Communications Inc. shares ended Thursday down 3.8% at $44.87, lagging a stronger U.S. market on a day that brought both a Supreme Court setback for big wireless carriers and a fresh dividend pledge from the company. The stock opened at $47.19, traded as low as $44.31 and saw more than 33 million shares change hands, latest market data showed.

The move stood out because the broader tape was better. The S&P 500 gained 0.41% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.73% to a record close, while the Nasdaq slipped 0.09% as chip stocks came under pressure, Reuters reported.

That matters now because Verizon is still treated by many investors as an income stock, meaning a stock held partly for regular cash payouts. Dividend yield — the annual dividend divided by the share price — was about 6.3% based on Thursday’s close and the new quarterly payout, a level that can draw buyers but also leaves the stock sensitive to interest-rate and balance-sheet worries. Verizon’s board declared a quarterly dividend of 70.75 cents a share, payable Aug. 3 to holders of record on July 10; Chief Executive Dan Schulman said the company’s commitment to the dividend “remains ironclad.” Verizon

The legal overhang was less friendly. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 against AT&T and Verizon in their challenge to the Federal Communications Commission’s system for imposing agency penalties, known as forfeiture orders. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that such orders do not “definitively resolve” a company’s legal obligations, while FCC Chairman Brendan Carr said the agency would “continue to hold companies accountable.” Reuters

The case grew out of fines tied to customer location data. The FCC fined AT&T $57 million and Verizon nearly $47 million after concluding the companies unlawfully sold access to customer location data without user consent; T-Mobile and Sprint also faced penalties, bringing the total to nearly $200 million, Reuters reported.

Peers were weak too, though Verizon fell more. AT&T dropped 3.2% to $22.77 and T-Mobile US fell 2.4% to $177.02, keeping the pressure within the U.S. wireless group rather than just one name.

Verizon also kept working the debt side of the story. On June 2, the company announced pricing terms for 20 offers to buy back debt securities for cash; a tender offer is an invitation to bondholders to sell their bonds back to the issuer, often used to manage maturities, coupons or debt structure. Verizon said withdrawal rights expired June 1 and that the offers were scheduled to expire June 16 unless extended or ended earlier.

But the stock’s support case has little room for slippage. In April, Verizon raised its 2026 adjusted EPS guidance — earnings per share excluding special items — after reporting its first positive first-quarter postpaid phone net additions since 2013, meaning it added more monthly-bill phone customers than it lost. The downside is that the same company filing pointed to competition, execution risk, interest rates, cyberattacks, debt and litigation as factors that could hurt results.

For now, the market is weighing two Verizon stories at once. One is the familiar cash-return pitch. The other is messier: regulatory risk, a large debt stack and a wireless business that still has to prove the turnaround can survive a rough tape.

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