New York, April 24, 2026, 4:03 PM EDT
- Liberty Broadband’s Class A and Class C shares each tumbled roughly 26% Friday, tracking a drop in Charter Communications.
- This matters for Liberty holders—they’re in line to get Charter shares, not cash, once the merger goes through.
- Charter shed 120,000 internet subscribers in the first quarter—surpassing analyst projections.
Liberty Broadband Corporation tumbled roughly 26% Friday, tracking Charter Communications’ steep drop. Charter stock cratered after the Spectrum parent disclosed internet subscriber losses that came in worse than analysts had anticipated. By late afternoon, Liberty’s Class A sat at $41.65, with Class C just above at $41.67. Charter shares, meanwhile, hovered at $179.04, also down 26%.
Liberty Broadband took the hit because its fortunes are closely linked to Charter. The company mainly holds its stake using the equity method, and per the merger agreement, each Liberty common share gets swapped for 0.236 of a Charter Class A share. This is an all-stock transaction—investors walk away with Charter shares, not cash.
Charter’s latest quarter put a spotlight on the company’s continuing struggle to keep broadband subscribers. The cable operator lost 120,000 broadband customers—well above the 100,036 decline analysts were looking for, Visible Alpha data cited by Reuters shows. Fixed wireless, or home internet via mobile networks, continues to squeeze cable providers.
Charter posted a 1% dip in first-quarter revenue to $13.6 billion. Adjusted EBITDA—a key profitability metric—came in 2.2% lower at $5.6 billion. Free cash flow slid as well, down to $1.4 billion from $1.6 billion. CEO Chris Winfrey pointed to the company’s network, pricing, and customer service efforts, saying Charter is still “confident” about long-term growth. Charter Communications Inc.
Liberty shareholders faced a clear calculation. With Charter’s stock late in the session, the 0.236 exchange ratio worked out to about $42.25 in Charter shares per Liberty common share—just about matching Liberty’s own trading price. As a result, Liberty’s shares had little space to make their own move on Friday.
Liberty has already offloaded GCI, its Alaska-based communications unit, clearing a hurdle for the Charter tie-up. According to its 2025 annual report, the company wrapped up the GCI sale on July 14, 2025. Post-transaction, Liberty was down to a single reportable segment: its equity-method stake in Charter.
This isn’t only about Charter and Liberty facing off. Comcast shares slid on Friday as well, caught in the fallout, while players like AT&T and T-Mobile have been grabbing at cable’s customer base with wireless deals and broadband bundles.
On Charter’s earnings call, Winfrey made it clear: scale remains important. “We like cable as an investment. We think it’s a great business,” he said. Charter, he noted, is interested in buying more cable assets—provided the price and terms are right. Light Reading
The Cox Communications deal remains active. Winfrey noted Charter already secured federal and state sign-offs but is still waiting on California. The company aims to close the deal this summer. Charter intends to roll out its Spectrum branding and pricing to Cox territories.
Liberty faces a clear risk here: as long as Charter’s shares remain weak, so does the worth of what Liberty gets in the merger. Both companies have flagged in proxy filings that any holdup in closing exposes Charter’s stock to more swings, leaving Liberty shareholders unable to pin down what their payout will actually be.
Charter flagged the Liberty Broadband merger and Cox transactions as risk points, warning that deal conditions might not be met on schedule—or possibly not met at all. This puts execution in the spotlight alongside subscriber figures as a key factor in the trade.
Liberty Broadband slid Friday, snapping back to its typical role as a leveraged proxy for Charter. Now, eyes are on Charter’s ability to stem broadband subscriber declines, seal the Cox deal, and keep the Liberty merger process moving ahead.