T-Mobile US Inc

NASDAQ: TMUS
$199.44
-$0.20 (-0.1%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

TMUS Articles

Verizon Communications announced Friday that it is eliminating its subsidized phone contracts and will offer a two-year service plan instead.
In the new RootMetrics survey of overall wireless service in the nation's 125 most populous markets, Atlanta and Chicago easily finished at the top.
In among the remarkably complex set of numbers Sprint issues with its quarterly earnings was a description of its plan to add stores using RadioShack locations.
A key analyst weighed in on T-Mobile and what direction it might be going in the wake of earnings.
Investors getting into Sprint shares now may catch a turnaround wave that may translate into a significantly higher share price. In contrast, T-Mobile shares may have reached most of their potential...
Tuesday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Alcoa, Allstate, Autodesk, ConocoPhillips, Frontier Communications, Stratasys and T-Mobile.
courtesy of T-Mobile US Inc.T-Mobile reported its second-quarter financial results Thursday before the markets opened. The telecom giant had $0.43 in earnings per share (EPS) on $8.2 billion in...
courtesy of T-Mobile US Inc.T-Mobile (NYSE: TMUS) has started to offer a special promotion for upgrades of Apple’s (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhone 6. The carrier may well pass Sprint (NYSE: S) to become the...
courtesy of T-Mobile US Inc.T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (NYSE: TMUS) announced its new promotion on Tuesday the “Un-carrier Amped” upgrades. There were already a series of plans released but this most...
All of a sudden, analysts see massive upside for AT&T, compared to its views in the gutter just a few months ago. Investors are paying attention.
Who benefits and who loses from the neck-and-neck struggle between Sprint and T-Mobile to dominate the second tier in the wireless industry?
Thursday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include AT&T, Capstone Turbine, ConAgra Foods, Diamond Offshore Drilling and Hecla Mining.
One area that is starting to garner some pretty serious attention recently is the wireless carriers. Some very positive trends are starting to emerge and analysts are taking note.
Sprint calls its latest plan “All-In” pricing, and the costs are not much different than T-Mobil's plan announced last week.
T-Mobile's latest plan is called Jump On Demand, a deal that allows subscribers to replace their phones anytime they want, up to three times in a year.