U.S. telecom and media giants are moving in opposite directions in midday trading. Comcast (NASDAQ:CMCSA | CMCSA Price Prediction) stock is up 7% to $24.76, while AT&T (NYSE:T) stock is down 5% to $21.52, and Verizon (NYSE:VZ) stock is down 7% to $43.29.
The split reflects three distinct catalysts hitting the sector at once. Comcast is rallying on a corporate breakup plan, AT&T faces a CFO transition plus satellite-broadband downgrade pressure, and Verizon is being removed from the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
Comcast Splits Into Two Companies
Comcast announced Monday that it intends to split into two standalone public companies, separating media from its technology and connectivity business through a tax-free spin-off of NBCUniversal and Sky. The separation is expected to take approximately one year, with current holders receiving stakes in both entities.
Co-CEO Mike Cavanagh will become CEO of NBCUniversal, former CFO Michael Angelakis will become CEO of Comcast, and Brian Roberts remains chairman over both. Cavanagh stated that NBCUniversal with Sky will have “the scale, brands, content and financial resources to compete as a premier global media and entertainment company.”
The move follows a brutal stretch for Comcast stock, which was down 22% over the past 12 months heading into today. Shares trade at a trailing P/E ratio of 5x with an analyst target price of $32.36. Reddit chatter on r/stocks tagged the breakup as “The Bull Catalyst the Sleeping Giant Has Been Waiting For.”
AT&T Hit by CFO Exit and Starlink Downgrade
AT&T disclosed that CFO Pascal Desroches will retire, effective December 31. Jennifer Biry, former CFO/COO of McAfee and former WarnerMedia CFO, was appointed Deputy CFO effective July 6, and steps into the CFO role on January 1, 2027.
Separately, AT&T stock was downgraded by a major Wall Street analyst citing rising broadband competition from satellite providers, with the upcoming SpaceX IPO drawing fresh attention to Starlink as a long-term threat. AT&T was also removed from the Russell Top 50 Index in the latest reconstitution.
The valuation debate cuts both ways. AT&T trades at a P/E ratio of 7x versus a telecom average near 17x and well below the analyst target of $30.25, paired with a 4.95% dividend yield. Reddit sentiment on r/WallStreetBets ran consistently bearish into today’s session.
Verizon Loses Its Dow Seat
S&P Dow Jones Indices is replacing Verizon with Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, effective prior to the opening of trading on June 29. The index committee cited Verizon’s relatively low share price, which made it a small contributor to the price-weighted benchmark.
Verizon stock had been a relative bright spot, up 18% over the past year before today’s drop, supported by a 6% dividend yield and an analyst target price of $51.9. The Dow removal is largely mechanical, but it compounds community concerns around satellite-broadband competition, a high debt load, and dividend sustainability.
The dominant Reddit thread driving bearish Verizon chatter was titled “SpaceX Reportedly Eyes U.S. Starlink Mobile Push: All Your Phone Bills Are Belong to us!”, echoing the same Starlink narrative pressuring AT&T. The cross-ticker overlap suggests investors are pricing in shared satellite-broadband risk across both wireless incumbents.
What to Watch Next
The common thread linking AT&T and Verizon weakness is satellite-broadband disruption fears, while Comcast’s spinoff offers a different value-unlocking thesis. Index removals are passive-flow events, and a planned CFO transition is not inherently negative, so today’s selling pressure on AT&T and Verizon may invite contrarian interest given the dividend profiles.
Stock traders can watch for whether Comcast holds its gains into the close as arbitrage desks model the NBCUniversal stub. For AT&T and Verizon, the next signal points are Q2 2026 earnings and any follow-on analyst notes addressing Starlink exposure. Ultimately, investors should consider keeping their position sizes modest while the catalysts settle.