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AT&T Moves Higher Pre-Market on $45 Billion Payout Plan Still in Focus
9 June 2026
2 mins read

AT&T Moves Higher Pre-Market on $45 Billion Payout Plan Still in Focus

NEW YORK, June 9, 2026, 09:02 EDT

  • AT&T kept its 2026 and long-term outlook unchanged ahead of CFO Pascal Desroches’ talk at the Mizuho Technology Conference.
  • Pre-market indications showed shares at about $22.58, up from Monday’s $22.50 close.
  • Shares continue to face pressure from worries about SpaceX. Oppenheimer said last week satellite broadband could hit older telecom stocks.

AT&T Inc. traded up in pre-market hours Tuesday. The company held to its 2026 targets and said it still aims to send more than $45 billion back to shareholders with dividends and buybacks from 2026 to 2028. AT&T shares were up 0.36% at $22.58 before the market opened, after closing Monday at $22.50 on the NYSE.

Timing is a factor. AT&T has come under renewed pressure following a steep drop blamed on satellite-broadband concerns, and this latest update provides investors with a new data point on cash flow ahead of the company’s second-quarter earnings report next month.

AT&T kept its forecast for second-quarter free cash flow between $4.0 billion and $4.5 billion. Free cash flow, after operations and capital spending, matters for AT&T’s dividend, stock buybacks and cutting debt.

AT&T is sticking with its forecast for better growth in adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings per share through 2028. Adjusted EBITDA takes out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and certain company-defined items. The company also said it expects its net debt-to-adjusted EBITDA ratio to get back to the 2.5 times range in about three years after it wraps up the EchoStar deal.

AT&T CFO Desroches had a spot on the schedule for the Mizuho Technology Conference at 9:00 a.m. ET. The company’s next earnings release is set for July 22, before the bell, when it posts its second-quarter numbers.

Futures for Wall Street pointed higher, Reuters said, with the Dow ahead 0.21%, S&P 500 futures up 0.36% and Nasdaq 100 futures climbing 0.7%. Chip shares kept rising and worries over the Middle East calmed, helping the broader tape.

Pressure is staying high. Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile said in May they were teaming up on a satellite-based joint venture targeting rural “dead zones.” That’s the same turf Starlink and other low-earth-orbit network players are looking to grow into. Reuters

The risk is still on the table: if satellite broadband drops prices more quickly or grabs more home-internet users than expected, AT&T’s fiber and wireless growth could hit a wall, leaving the company with less flexibility for cutting debt and paying out capital. Oppenheimer flagged last week that SpaceX might shake up the $1.6 trillion U.S. communications sector, with analyst Timothy Horan cautioning that “longer-term broadband subscriber growth and eventually mobile” could face pressure from low-earth-orbit satellite networks. Reuters

AT&T is betting on fiber. CEO John Stankey last month told Barron’s that satellite is useful in remote spots, but said, “I don’t think satellite is a substitute” for AT&T’s network speed and reliability. Barron’s

AT&T is looking to cut costs by moving older networks out of its base. In California, the company said it will put $19 billion into investment through 2030, with plans for fiber to reach over 4 million more homes and businesses and to add more than 1,200 new cell sites. AT&T is also seeking to retire copper-based phone service in parts of the state.

AT&T held its ground on the first-quarter base, which kept analysts talking. The company posted $31.5 billion in revenue and $11.8 billion adjusted EBITDA. Free cash flow was $2.5 billion for the quarter. Postpaid phone net adds came in at 294,000, and advanced-connectivity internet added 584,000 lines.

AT&T shares are little changed. The company kept its 2026 cash plan in place but didn’t lift guidance.

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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