VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS INC. $48 (New York symbol VZ, Conservative Growth and Income Portfolios, Utilities sector; Shares outstanding: 2.9 billion; Market cap: $139.2 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 1.1; Dividend yield: 4.4%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www. verizon.com) is buying the 45% of Verizon Wireless that it doesn’t already own from U.K.-based Vodafone Group (Nasdaq symbol VOD). Verizon Wireless is a joint venture that sells wireless services to 101.2 million U.S. subscribers.
Verizon will pay $130 billion for Vodafone’s stake, including $58.9 billion in cash. It will also issue $60.2 billion of new common shares to Vodafone shareholders, which will give them 30% of the combined firm. Notes and other compensation will cover the remaining $11.0 billion. Verizon expects to close the deal in the first quarter of 2014.
Meanwhile, strong demand for wireless and highspeed Internet increased the company’s earnings by 20.3% in the third quarter of 2013, to $0.77 a share from $0.64 a year earlier. Revenue rose 4.4%, to $30.3 billion from $29.0 billion.
The stock trades at 17.0 times the $2.82 a share that Verizon should earn in 2013. That’s a higher p/e ratio than AT&T, but it’s still reasonable in light of its growing wireless business. The $2.12 dividend yields 4.4%.
Verizon is a buy.