Editorial Standards

Latest News Today maintains rigorous editorial standards. Our team verifies information from trusted sources and provides context to help readers understand complex stories.

Last Updated: Sunday, May 17, 2026 at 04:09 PM
Category: Id

Editor's Note

Latest News Today provides comprehensive coverage and analysis of breaking news stories. This article is part of our ongoing coverage of wbna6351948, bringing you verified information from trusted sources with added context and expert perspective.

Why This Matters: Understanding the full context of this story helps readers make informed decisions and stay updated on developments that impact our community.

Verizon posts flat earnings

Verizon Communications Inc.'s third-quarter profit held steady at about $1.80 billion as declining revenues from traditional phone services at the nation's biggest telephone company were offset by another blockbuster quarter for Verizon Wireless, which added a record 1.7 million subscribers.

Verizon Communications Inc.'s third-quarter profit held steady at about $1.80 billion as declining revenues from traditional phone services at the nation's biggest telephone company were offset by another blockbuster quarter for Verizon Wireless, which added a record 1.7 million subscribers.

The profit reported Thursday amounted to 64 cents per share, matching most Wall Street forecasts. In the same quarter last year, Verizon earned $1.79 billion, which also worked out to 64 cents per share.

Third-quarter revenues totaled $18.21 billion, up 6.7 percent compared with $17.06 billion a year earlier.

Verizon Wireless, which is 45 percent owned by Vodafone PLC of Britain, accounted for 40 percent of the total with revenues of $7.31 billion, up 23 percent from last year's third-quarter tally of $5.94 billion.

Domestic telephone revenues slipped 2.1 percent to $9.65 billion compared with a year earlier, but that marked a slight gain compared with the second quarter of 2004 as Verizon began reaping the benefits of a sudden shift in the regulatory and competitive backdrop to the local phone industry.

In the summer, AT&T Corp. and MCI Corp. began withdrawing from that battlefield after a court ruling threw out rules which made it cheaper for those companies to sell their own local phone service by leasing residential lines from Verizon and other Bells at government-set rates.

And as Verizon began winning back local business, the company also continued to grab long-distance business from AT&T and other traditional leaders in that market, with revenues growing 8.7 percent to $1.09 billion.