Telecom & Wireless

Telecom & Wireless Articles

AT&T would like to show strong earnings for the most recent quarter, if for no other reason than to show the Dow Jones Industrial Average that it made a mistake dumping it from the index.
In a new research note, Cowen says two of the top stocks in telecom services and data center should be bought before the earnings print.
BlackBerry announced that it has agreed to acquire mobile security firm WatchDox. The terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
Verizon Communications reported mixed first-quarter financial results Tuesday before the markets opened.
The country's two largest wireless carriers are scheduled to report their first-quarter results this week.
Beginning this weekend, Verizon Communications FiOS customers will be able to subscribe to a new plan for a total price of $55 a month.
AT&T's rating was reiterated as Outperform by Credit Suisse's Joseph Mastrogiovanni. His call also comes with a $38 price target.
Sprint has started a program to deliver phones to people's homes, along with an expert able to help customers configure and use their devices.
Wireless carrier Sprint more than doubled its retail footprint Saturday with the opening of 1,435 Sprint-RadioShack co-branded stores.
Ahead of the introduction of Apple Inc. new smartwatch, the short interest in the company with the largest market cap in the world fell.
Merrill Lynch has made a call ahead of the Windstream Holdings spin-off to give investors a clearer perspective on what they might be getting into.
CenturyLink is making an interesting case for its dividend payout ratio for the coming years, and Merrill Lynch likes what it sees.
T-Mobile's CEO said on Wednesday that the telecom carrier will give customers who buy a new Samsung phone from the company a one-year subscription to Netflix.
Now that AT&T is formally out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, 24/7 Wall St. cannot help but wonder if it is finally safe for investors to start buying its shares again.
T-Mobile's latest aggressive price cutting plan is aimed at small businesses. T-Mobile may believe it can price cut its way to more subscribers, but that is a dicey plan.