AT&T’s (T) shares remained in the red zone on Monday morning, even as the telecommunications company disclosed its “record fast” rollout of the mid-band spectrum it acquired recently from EchoStar (SATS) in a $23 billion deal.
Meet Your ETF AI Analyst
- Discover how TipRanks' ETF AI Analyst can help you make smarter investment decisions
- Explore ETFs TipRanks' users love and see what insights the ETF AI Analyst reveals about the ones you follow.
In August, the Texas-based telco acquired the mid-band 3.45 GHz and the low-band 600 MHz from EchoStar, opening up the latter’s Boost Mobile subscribers to receive their primary connection from AT&T. Both spectrum bands improve 5G performance, although the former provides faster speeds over shorter distances, while the latter provides wide coverage but slower speeds.
AT&T 5G Boost to Improve Streaming and Gaming
AT&T announced on Monday that it has now deployed the low-band spectrum at more than 23,000 cell sites across the U.S. The wireless network provider expects the move to result in “substantial increases in speed and capacity” for its customers across 48 states in the country.
The telecommunications company noted that the new spectrum offers more capacity for streaming, gaming, and AI-powered applications. It expects the deployment to further boost the company’s efforts to expand its converged subscriber base — that is, customers using both AT&T’s 5G wireless service and home internet service together.
AT&T Boosts 5G amid Intense Competition
AT&T’s new deployment comes at a time when the company is battling intensifying competition in its wireless business segment. During its most recent third-quarter results, AT&T saw its customer losses in the lucrative postpaid phone service rise by 14 basis points, despite its revenue from providing wireless phone, data, and related mobile services to customers rising 2.3% year-over-year.
Rival Verizon (VZ) also lost 7,000 individual subscribers in this segment. However, T-Mobile (TMUS) added one million new customers in that same category, its highest Q3 additions in over a decade.
Nonetheless, AT&T is betting on its converged subscriber base. In its third quarter, the telco gained over 550,000 new broadband customers from its wired broadband service AT&T Fiber and its wireless counterpart Internet Air. The addition marked its largest increase in over eight years.
Is AT&T a Buy, Sell, or Hold?
Across Wall Street, AT&T shares currently enjoy a Strong Buy consensus rating. This is based on 12 Buys and four Holds assigned by 16 analysts over the past three months.
At $31.08, the average T price target implies over 21% upswing potential from the current trading level.



