VFN Holdings Inc (Vero) continued to advance its Texas fiber strategy this week, highlighting new network completions in Hamlin and Anson via its Vero Fiber unit. The updates underscore the company’s focus on expanding high-speed connectivity in smaller, historically underserved communities across the state.
Meet Samuel – Your Personal Investing Prophet
- Start a conversation with TipRanks’ trusted, data-backed investment intelligence
- Ask Samuel about stocks, your portfolio, or the market and get instant, personalized insights in seconds
In Hamlin, Vero completed a fiber-to-the-home build that now passes more than 1,200 homes and businesses. The network offers reported speeds of up to 2.3 gigabits per second, positioning the service toward premium bandwidth and reliability rather than low-cost commodity internet.
Management framed the Hamlin deployment as both a digital infrastructure upgrade and a growth opportunity, with potential for incremental recurring revenue as residential and business subscribers come online. The project also provides a foothold in another smaller Texas market, supporting a broader regional scale-up of network assets.
Separately, Vero reported the completion of a fiber network in Anson, Texas, constructed in roughly eight months and now fully operational. The Anson build extends high-speed connectivity to more than 1,900 homes and businesses and marks Vero’s 13th completed fiber network in the state.
The Anson milestone highlights improving execution capabilities and a growing operational footprint that could enhance fixed-cost leverage as utilization rises. Faster deployment timelines, if sustained, may accelerate monetization of capital expenditures and strengthen the economics of future builds.
Across both projects, Vero continues to emphasize support for local digital infrastructure and closing the broadband gap in underserved areas. These efforts may position the company to participate in public-private initiatives or tap state and federal broadband funding, while reinforcing its competitive stance against larger incumbents and regional rivals.
Collectively, the week’s developments point to steady expansion of VFN Holdings’ Texas fiber platform and a growing base of potential recurring revenue. If network adoption tracks expectations, the company’s scaled presence in multiple Texas communities could improve bargaining power with vendors and partners and support longer-term growth prospects.

