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Fresh look at Verizon Communications after recent share performance
Verizon Communications (VZ) has drawn fresh attention after mixed recent share performance, with the stock rising over the past month but declining over the past 3 months and over the past week.
See our latest analysis for Verizon Communications.
At a share price of US$46.37, Verizon’s recent pattern shows short term momentum fading, with the 1 day share price return down 1.47% and the 90 day share price return down 5.39%. This is occurring even as the year to date share price return of 14.44% and 1 year total shareholder return of 12.51% point to a stronger longer term picture.
If this kind of mixed momentum has you thinking about where else returns could come from, it may be worth scanning 38 power grid technology and infrastructure stocks
Verizon trades at US$46.37 with an analyst price target of US$51.85 and an internal value estimate implying a sizeable discount, so is the stock quietly undervalued here, or is the market already pricing in its future growth?
Most Popular Narrative: 23.4% Overvalued
Compared with Verizon’s last close at $46.37, the most followed narrative pins fair value at $37.59, implying the stock trades above that estimate and raising questions about what is built into those assumptions.
Verizon, for instance, had been on my wish list for a very long time, but I kept putting it off due to conflicting reports about the company. At the time (2023), I was able to buy it for approximately $31. Eventually, I did purchase it this week (May 5, 2026) at $47.50 because the company is showing strong figures, including for the coming years. I bought a very small batch, 5 shares. And yes, the psychology of the stock market: if I buy, it drops! I will wait and see for now, and if it drops further later, I will just buy another small amount to maintain the average purchase price. This purchasing method has already saved me a lot of money over the past few years! My goal is to invest a maximum of $5,000 within one to two years. That brings me to 50 companies in which I have invested, with a current portfolio value of $200,000, which has yielded a return of over 15% per year over the past 5 years, partly due to reinvesting all dividends.
The narrative leans on steady revenue growth assumptions, resilient profit margins and a future earnings multiple that aims to balance dividend income with moderate expansion. Want to see which specific growth and margin paths justify a fair value below today’s price, and how those inputs link back to the required return in this model and its payout expectations.