Telecom Turnaround

Showing 339 articles
Business

Commerzbank's Meteoric Rise: Is There Still Value Left for Investors?

Following a staggering 92.9% one-year surge, Commerzbank shares have cooled slightly. With the stock now trading around €34.69, analysts are divided: deep-value models signal significant upside, while traditional metrics suggest a fair price. We examine the data and the debate shaping one of Germany's banking turnaround stories.

Business

MSM International's Capital Efficiency Gains Signal Potential for Sustained Growth

MSM International (Catalist: 51O) is demonstrating a promising trajectory in capital efficiency, with its Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) showing improvement. While the current 5.5% ROCE is modest, its alignment with industry averages and the context of a recent turnaround from losses paints a picture of a company methodically enhancing its profitability. Investors are taking note, as reflected in a significant 110% total return over the past five years.

Business

Benchmark Names T-Mobile (TMUS) a 2026 Best Idea

T-Mobile US Inc. (NASDAQ:TMUS) ranks among the most promising QQQ stocks according to hedge funds. On January 21, Benchmark reaffirmed its Buy rating on T-Mobile US Inc. (NASDAQ:TMUS) with a $295 price target, classifying the telecom provider as a “2026 Benchmark Best Idea.” The firm remains confident that T-Mobile’s network strengths and potential for expanded […]

Business

Ericsson's Strong Q4 Performance Catches Value Investors' Eye

The Hotchkis & Wiley Global Value Fund credited Ericsson (ERIC) as a key driver of its fourth-quarter returns, as the telecom equipment maker's shares surged. The fund's latest investor letter details how strategic stock picks, particularly in non-U.S. markets, fueled its outperformance against a global benchmark.

Business

Verizon's Regulatory Tightrope: ESOP Filing and Frontier Deal Oversight Cement Its Utility-Like Trajectory

As Verizon Communications navigates a $29 million ESOP share registration and heightened regulatory scrutiny of its $20 billion Frontier fiber acquisition, analysts are increasingly framing the telecom giant as a high-yield, bond-proxy utility. With heavy debt and dividend commitments constraining flexibility, the company's strategic moves are being watched for signs of how it will balance growth with its new, more regulated profile.