Latest news with #5G
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Business
- Yahoo
AT&T (NYSE:T) Declares Dividends on Preferred and Common Stocks for August 2025
AT&T recently declared quarterly dividends for both its preferred and common stocks, underscoring its commitment to shareholder returns. Over the past month, AT&T's stock moved up by 2%, closely aligning with the broader market's 2% increase. While the dividend announcements may have reinforced investor confidence in the company's stability, the performance was generally in step with market trends. The ongoing antitrust lawsuit mentioning AT&T has not drastically deterred its market performance. Additionally, the company's collaborations in enhancing public safety with technology partnerships have bolstered its innovative image, likely supporting its consistent stock movement. AT&T has 3 weaknesses we think you should know about. Uncover the next big thing with financially sound penny stocks that balance risk and reward. AT&T's recent dividend announcements alongside technological collaborations may strengthen investor confidence, contributing to a robust narrative around 5G and fiber investments. Over the past five years, AT&T's total shareholder return, including both share price appreciation and dividends, was 70.36%, reflecting a steady commitment to enhancing shareholder value. In contrast, its recent yearly performance outpaced the US Telecom industry, which saw a 25.5% increase, showcasing that AT&T is keeping pace with, if not exceeding, broader industry trends. The ongoing antitrust lawsuit's minimal impact on share price suggests an underlying resilience that aligns with AT&T's growth strategies. However, the regulatory and competitive pressures remain significant hurdles. These factors could potentially influence revenue and earnings forecasts, especially as AT&T navigates its transition to fiber infrastructure, which aims to bolster net margins through cost reductions. The maintenance of a US$40 billion shareholder return plan, combined with a US$10 billion stock repurchase program, further underscores the firm's focus on earnings-per-share growth. With AT&T's current share price of US$27.5, the market attention shifts to the consensus analyst price target of US$29.30. This price target suggests a moderate upside potential, while the most bullish analyst forecasts envision a 12.6% increase in share value to US$31.46. As AT&T continues to execute its strategic initiatives, the alignment of its long-term investments with analyst expectations remains crucial in navigating market dynamics and investor sentiment. Gain insights into AT&T's future direction by reviewing our growth report. This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned. Companies discussed in this article include NYSE:T. This article was originally published by Simply Wall St. Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team@


The Star
6 hours ago
- Business
- The Star
Ensuring benefits for the rakyat with responsible use of mobile phone data
RECENT discussions surrounding the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission's (MCMC) Mobile Phone Data Programme have stirred public debate, raising questions over privacy, cybersecurity and the government's role in data stewardship. As someone deeply involved in nation building in the areas of network infrastructure and cybersecurity, I feel it is crucial to bring technical clarity to the Malaysian public regarding this issue and separating speculation from substantiated fact. Understanding the nature of the data First and foremost, the data collected under the Mobile Phone Data Programme is aggregated, anonymised and devoid of any personally identifiable information (PII). The data only provides generalised metadata such as signal strength, network usage trends, location area codes and other non-personal metrics that can help our regulator assess mobile network performance, digital divide issues and emergency response readiness. To equate this programme with intrusive surveillance is technically inaccurate and misleading. The data points collected are no different, if not significantly less granular, than the metadata routinely collected by global platforms like Google, Apple, Meta and numerous other mobile apps for analytics, service optimisation and targeted advertising. Legal and ethical boundaries are intact The Malaysian regulator, MCMC, in line with the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 and the Personal Data Protection Act 2010, operates within strict regulatory boundaries. This particular programme does not collect names, phone numbers, call logs, browsing history, or message contents. Generally, the participating Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) are very cautious on sharing their data yet, they have had no issues in working closely with MCMC on this project. Furthermore, access to the metadata is limited to selected analytical tools within the Commission, with no commercial or third-party exposure. This makes the dataset fundamentally different from the kind of data typically vulnerable to misuse or monetisation in commercial tech ecosystems. Strategic importance in a digital nation From a technical and policy standpoint, the Mobile Phone Data Programme is strategically very important for national digital infrastructure planning. With Malaysia advancing toward wider 5G deployments and smart city initiatives, regulators require real-time, evidence-based insights into mobile coverage, device density and population mobility to guide resource allocation, spectrum planning, and emergency readiness. For instance, during natural disasters or public health crises, such data can significantly improve our authorities' responses, enabling faster and more targeted assistance being provided to the needy. Several advanced economies, including South Korea, Finland and Estonia, have long adopted similar anonymised data programmes providing effective public benefits and without any complains about infringing on personal privacy. Addressing the misinformation ecosystem It is unfortunate that a narrative of distrust has taken root, largely fuelled by misinformation and a poor understanding of network-level data analytics. In the absence of context, the public is led to fear a 'surveillance state,' even when the technical facts clearly indicate that no such risk exists. MCMC's proactive move to engage cybersecurity experts, telcos and the public through open communication is the correct path forward. Transparency, ongoing stakeholder dialogue and third-party audits should be encouraged, not to defend against wrongdoing, but to reinforce trust in a system that is technically sound and ethically implemented. Final thoughts The integrity of our digital ecosystem must be safeguarded, not only from cyber threats but from disinformation that can undermine our national progress. The Mobile Phone Data Program is not a breach of privacy but instead, an important tool for digital nation-building, designed with checks and balances that preserves user anonymity and protects public trust. Let us not conflate good governance with intrusion, or precaution with paranoia. This part of Malaysia's digital journey uses the carefully redacted data to ensure better mobile coverage and connectivity, amongst other things, to bring better comfort and telco services to the Malaysian public. Prof Emeritus Dr Sureswaran Ramadass APAC IPv6 council chairman and Cybersecurity subject matter expert


The Star
7 hours ago
- Business
- The Star
Trump wants EchoStar, FCC to reach 'amicable' deal over wireless licenses, company says
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a "One Big Beautiful" event at the White House in Washington, DC., U.S., June 26, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump prodded Dish TV parent EchoStar Corp and Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr earlier this month to reach an amicable deal over the fate of the company's wireless spectrum licenses, the company said in a filing on Friday. In May, the FCC told EchoStar it was investigating the company's compliance obligations to provide 5G service in the United States, questioning EchoStar's buildout extension and mobile-satellite service. Bloomberg News first reported that Trump met on June 12 with EchoStar Chair Charlie Ergen and later called Carr to take part in the meeting. EchoStar has been trying to shield its cache of wireless spectrum licenses from the threat of revocation by the FCC. The White House did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on Friday and had previously declined to confirm the meeting took place. Carr did not immediately comment on the report on Friday but at a monthly FCC press conference on Thursday he told reporters, regarding EchoStar, that the "status quo needs to change" and added there was a "narrow window of opportunity here." EchoStar said in a filing on Friday that Trump "encouraged the parties involved to reach an amicable resolution." Ergen told Carr this month any reconsideration of the construction deadline extensions or revision to the 2 GHz band's sharing rules "would threaten the viability of EchoStar's current operations and future plans." U.S. satellite TV provider DirecTV terminated its agreement to acquire EchoStar's satellite television business last year, which includes rival Dish TV, over a failed debt-exchange offer. EchoStar said the FCC review was "harming EchoStar's ongoing deployment and threaten its viability as a wireless provider as well as endanger the video and broadband satellite services upon which millions of consumers rely." EchoStar previously disclosed that it missed roughly $500 million in interest payments, citing uncertainty around the ongoing FCC review but said on Friday that based on current discussions with the commission it was making interest payments to "further extend the timeline for EchoStar to explore an acceptable resolution of the FCC's stated concerns." EchoStar said on Friday that it was forgoing some other interest payments, citing uncertainty around the FCC review. (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Mark Porter and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)


Time of India
11 hours ago
- Business
- Time of India
Mobile services revenue to grow at 5.4% CAGR to $39.3 bn by 2029
The continued rise in service penetration, especially in rural and underserved markets, and growth in the 5G-led mobile data services segment is set to boost India's mobile services revenue to a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.4% to $39.3 billion in 2029 from $30.2 billion in 2023 boosted by, a report said. However, mobile voice service revenue is set to fall 2.5% annually due to the growing consumer preference for internet-based communication services and bundling of free voice minutes with mobile service plans, analytics firm GlobalData said. It added that this would lead to a drop in the voice average revenue per user (ARPU) levels. But mobile data services will offset that drop and help total mobile services market to maintain strong growth till 2029, GlobalData said. Mobile data service revenue is expected to rise at 9.3% CAGR between 2024 and 2029, driven by growing availability of 4G and 5G networks across the country, and increasing consumption of mobile data as adoption of higher-ARPU yielding 5G data plans increase. "The average monthly data usage over mobile networks is forecast to increase from 23.9GB in 2024 to 51.5GB in 2029, driven by the growing consumption of online video and social media content over smartphones on the back of data-centric packages offered by telcos," said Hrushikesh Mahananda, a telecom research analyst at GlobalData. The firm said that while 4G will remain the leading mobile technology in terms of subscriptions till 2026, 5G subscriptions will surpass 4G to account for 67% share of the total mobile subscriptions in 2029, driven by ongoing 5G expansions. The surge in 5G subscriptions will also be helped by increasing demand and wider availability of 5G-enabled smartphones and promotional 5G plans with value-added benefits.


CNA
12 hours ago
- Business
- CNA
Trump wants EchoStar, FCC to reach 'amicable' deal over wireless licenses, company says
WASHINGTON :President Donald Trump prodded Dish TV parent EchoStar Corp and Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr earlier this month to reach an amicable deal over the fate of the company's wireless spectrum licenses, the company said in a filing on Friday. In May, the FCC told EchoStar it was investigating the company's compliance obligations to provide 5G service in the United States, questioning EchoStar's buildout extension and mobile-satellite service. Bloomberg News first reported that Trump met on June 12 with EchoStar Chair Charlie Ergen and later called Carr to take part in the meeting. EchoStar has been trying to shield its cache of wireless spectrum licenses from the threat of revocation by the FCC. The White House did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on Friday and had previously declined to confirm the meeting took place. Carr did not immediately comment on the report on Friday but at a monthly FCC press conference on Thursday he told reporters, regarding EchoStar, that the "status quo needs to change" and added there was a "narrow window of opportunity here." EchoStar said in a filing on Friday that Trump "encouraged the parties involved to reach an amicable resolution." Ergen told Carr this month any reconsideration of the construction deadline extensions or revision to the 2 GHz band's sharing rules "would threaten the viability of EchoStar's current operations and future plans." U.S. satellite TV provider DirecTV terminated its agreement to acquire EchoStar's satellite television business last year, which includes rival Dish TV, over a failed debt-exchange offer. EchoStar said the FCC review was "harming EchoStar's ongoing deployment and threaten its viability as a wireless provider as well as endanger the video and broadband satellite services upon which millions of consumers rely." EchoStar previously disclosed that it missed roughly $500 million in interest payments, citing uncertainty around the ongoing FCC review but said on Friday that based on current discussions with the commission it was making interest payments to "further extend the timeline for EchoStar to explore an acceptable resolution of the FCC's stated concerns."