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High-Yield Verizon Is A Buy On Post-Earnings Weakness

High-Yield Verizon Is A Buy On Post-Earnings Weakness

Verizon Is A Top Pick For High-Yield Investors 

We've like Verizon (NYSE: VZ) for the last 18-months to two years for a variety of reasons that include but not limited to value, yield, growth, the consumer, digital, streaming, 5G, and the IoT. While the former makes the stock an attractive buy the latter makes it a must-own stock, at least in our opinion. The consumer is driving our economy, digital and streaming are high-growth markets, 5G is going to ramp all that into overdrive, and the IoT is quietly waiting for it to happen. There are others in the space but T-Mobile doesn't pay a dividend and AT&T has too much baggage for our taste. The bottom line, Verizon is a lightly valued blue-chip company supported by secular trends and one that pays a safely growing 4.3% yield. 

Mixed Results Fail To Drive Verizon Higher 

Shares of Verizon are down following the Q1 release despite what appears to be a decent report. The two biggest negatives we see are the larger than expected declines in both post-paid and wireless customers and the fact results only barely beat the consensus. Looking at the one in light of the other, the larger than expected decline in post-paid and wireless users can be overlooked. The $32.9 billion in revenue is down from the peak holiday quarter but that was expected. More importantly, the revenue is up 4.1% from last year and 135 basis points above the consensus. 

In terms of user count, the post-paid business shed 178K users versus the 42K expected while the wireless business shed 170K versus the expectation for gains. This was offset by gains in other areas, however, the led to positive results for all three business segments. On the consumer end, revenue grew 4.7% on strength in the Fios fiber optic bundle. Fios grew by 80%. On the business end, revenue grew by 1.3% while the Media segment grew a more substantial 10.4%. Moving down to the bottom line, the company's net income increased by 25% over the past year due to cash-saving efforts (reached ahead of target) and business strength. On the bottom line, the GAAP $1.27 is up 27% from last year and beat the consensus by a penny. The adjusted $1.31 grew by at a slower 5% rate but also beat the consensus. 

The takeaway for us is that, even with the decline in user counts, the company reaffirmed its guidance for the year. Execs are expecting to see revenue growth at a minimum of 2.0% YOY with total wireless in the range of 3.0%. This should produce earnings in the range of $5.00 to $5.15 versus the $5.07 consensus figure and we think the guidance is light. Aside from the fact that Verizon tends to beat the consensus more often than not, we don't think this guidance takes into account the strength of the rebound and the impact of rapidly improving consumer conditions on phone, Internet, and wireless usage. 

Verizon Is A Safely Growing 4.3% Yield 

Verizon doesn't pay as much as AT&T but once again there is much less baggage and legacy issue with Verizon. That said, the 4.3% yield is attractive from the high-yield perspective and it is backed up by some solid metrics. To start, the payout ratio is fairly low at 50% and there is room to bump it up on the cash-flow statement. Looking at the balance sheet, the company is well-capitalized with some debt but there are two things to consider. First, even at current levels the company is only moderately levered and has reasonable coverage so no threat to the distribution. Second, debt is coming down and helping to free up the cash flow. The takeaway here is the current payout is safe and the outlook for a 9th consecutive dividend is good, but we don't recommend counting on a large one. 

The Technical Outlook: Verizon Pulls Back Into A Buying Opportunity 

Shares of Verizon pulled back after the Q1 report but are already showing signs of support. Support appears to be near the $58 level which is consistent with past price action. The indicators are still mixed but have a bullish bias which suggests a swing in momentum is about to carry this stock higher. The next key level of resistance is at $59, once the stock gets back above there we see it moving up into the end of the year and closing well above the $62 level.

Why High-Yield Verizon Is Still A Buy

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Thomas Hughes
About The Author

Thomas Hughes

Contributing Author

Technical and Fundamental Analysis

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Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
Verizon Communications (VZ)
4.7052 of 5 stars
$42.58+0.9%6.36%18.35Hold$46.37
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