Down 9%, Should You Buy the Dip on AT&T?

Key Points

AT&T 's (NYSE: T) stock hit a 52-week high of $29.03 per share on April 3. That represented a gain of more than 60% over the previous year. Investors appear to have embraced AT&T for three reasons:

  1. Its wireless business was growing at an impressive rate.

  2. Its high dividend became even more attractive as interest rates declined.

  3. It was insulated from the rising tariffs and trade wars.

Today, however, AT&T's stock trades about 9% below that 52-week high. Should investors consider this slight pullback to be a good buying opportunity? Or could it sink even further over the next year?

Down 9%, Should You Buy the Dip on AT&T?

How did AT&T revive its business?

AT&T tried to become a pay-TV giant by acquiring DirecTV in 2015, Time Warner in 2018, and other smaller media assets. However, tough competition from Netflix and other streaming media platforms crushed its costly attempt to build a streaming media empire. As AT&T poured more cash into its media businesses, its core wireless and broadband businesses struggled to expand.

In 2021 and 2022, AT&T finally divested DirecTV, Time Warner, and most of its media assets. By abandoning its dreams of building a media empire, AT&T freed up more cash to expand its 5G and fiber businesses as it reduced its debt. That streamlined business has consistently gained more postpaid wireless and fiber broadband subscribers over the past two years.

Net Additional Subscribers

2023

2024

Q1 2025

Postpaid Phone Service

1.7 million

1.7 million

324,000

Fiber Broadband Service

1.1 million

1.0 million

261,000

Data source: AT&T.

AT&T is also growing faster than Verizon Communications , which only grew its postpaid wireless subscribers by 449,000 in 2023 and 851,000 in 2024. But both telcos are growing more slowly than T-Mobile US , which added 3.1 million postpaid subscribers in both 2023 and 2024.

How safe is AT&T's dividend?

AT&T continues to gain new subscribers at a healthy clip, but its free cash flow ( FCF ) declined over the past two years. That drop was caused by its higher investments in its 5G and fiber networks, as well as more aggressive promotions to keep pace with Verizon and T-Mobile.

Metric

2023

2024

Q1 2025

Free Cash Flow

$16.8 billion

$15.3 billion*

$3.1 billion

Dividend Payments

$8.1 billion

$8.2 billion

$2.0 billion

Data source: AT&T. *Excluding the sale of its remaining stake in DirecTV.

OK