Denver, May 2, 2026, 12:07 (MDT)
Lumen Technologies Inc. faces its May 5 earnings announcement with markets looking for another loss, while the stock managed a solid gain on Friday. Refinitiv numbers via TradingView call for a 14-cent-per-share loss. Lumen closed at $9.32, up $0.475 from the previous finish.
Timing’s key here. Lumen will release first-quarter numbers after Tuesday’s close, with the earnings call scheduled for 5 p.m. ET. This quarter, the company is rolling out a new way to break down revenue—sales will be split out by products and services, part of management’s push to make its enterprise strategy more transparent.
This marks the first quarterly update since Lumen wrapped up a significant portfolio sale. According to a pro forma SEC filing, the consumer fiber-to-the-home segment that was sold to AT&T no longer counts toward Lumen’s consolidated numbers after Feb. 2, the date the $5.75 billion transaction closed.
This sale alters how Lumen stacks up against AT&T, a far bigger player in telecom that’s putting these assets toward boosting its national fiber reach. When the deal was announced, Reuters reported that the unit supplied roughly 1 million fiber customers to AT&T. Lumen CFO Chris Stansbury, for his part, said the move lets Lumen zero in on enterprise fiber and the low-latency systems essential for AI work.
Lumen is pitching the divestiture as more than an asset offload—a chance to reset both debt and strategy. The company plans to put roughly $4.8 billion in proceeds, plus cash on hand, toward paying down superpriority debt, aiming to trim annual interest costs by around $300 million and push total debt below $13 billion. CEO Kate Johnson described it as a step toward “powering the digital infrastructure” for the AI era. Lumen Investor Relations
The bigger issue for the market: is that narrative translating into revenue yet? In April, AWS announced AWS Interconnect-last mile, now live in the U.S. with Lumen as its launch partner. The service allows customers to establish private, high-speed links from branches, data centers, and remote locations to AWS—scaling bandwidth anywhere from 1 Gbps up to 100 Gbps.
Lumen is working to streamline purchases of its physical network. “Cloud and network infrastructure can no longer operate separately,” said Jim Fowler, chief technology and product officer. IDC’s Peter Chahal noted that enterprises are after network services that deliver “agility and simplicity” on par with the cloud. Lumen Investor Relations
Away from the cloud narrative, Lumen still faces a hefty balance-sheet overhaul. The company secured an $825 million revolving credit facility—basically, a loan it can tap and repay as needed—set to mature in April 2029. Loan terms call for a total net leverage cap of 5.25-to-1 and require at least 2-to-1 interest coverage, kicking in from the quarter ended June 30.
The downside is hard to ignore. Analysts polled by MarketBeat are calling for Q1 revenue at $2.8423 billion—a 10.7% drop on the year. If the erosion in legacy lines keeps outpacing gains from AI and cloud connectivity, that extra debt buffer might not offer much comfort to equity holders, no matter what the latest share bounce implies.
Lumen and Qwest are still pushing forward with exchange offers and consent solicitations for Qwest’s 2056 and 2057 notes. If things continue on track, the old notes could come off the NYSE by May 11. That puts the May 5 call in the spotlight—not just for earnings, but for a read on debt moves and whether Lumen’s enterprise shift is outpacing the legacy business.