Verizon just hiked its dividend again — 69 cents a share. On paper, that looks like strength. Shareholders get a little more cash, and the company gets to brag about “rewarding investors.”
But let’s be real. This isn’t strength. It’s a cover-up.
Verizon is carrying one of the biggest debt loads in corporate America. Billions locked into spectrum, billions owed in interest, billions still needed just to keep the network running. Growth? Flat. Competition? Relentless.
So why raise the dividend? Simple: it’s cheaper to keep investors quiet with cash than to deal with the bigger problem.
That’s not strategy. That’s theater. It’s a short-term distraction dressed up as long-term confidence. Debt doesn’t disappear because you slap a bigger payout on top. Real innovation doesn’t come from squeezing another cent into dividends.
This move doesn’t scream strength. It whispers fear. Fear that if the checks ever stop, the whole illusion collapses.
Dividends don’t hide debt — they just rent time.