Moat
Verizon Communications
Verizon Communications provides wireless, fixed wireless, fiber broadband, video, voice, and enterprise communications services in the United States.
Metadata
Where this company sits
- Ticker
- VZ
- Rank snapshot
- ≈ 70
- Sector
- Communication Services
- Industry
- Wireless Telecommunications
- Region
- United States
- Index
- S&P 500 · Top 75 by market cap
Metrics
Scoring view
Every metric is paired with a short rationale. The numbers are deliberate, not divine.
Decentralizability
4.0/10
Profitability
7.0/10
Price / Earnings
11.8x
Market cap
$201.9B
Freed-up capital potential
$24.2B
Narrative
Why the company matters
A short editorial overview plus the current thesis on moat strength and decentralization pressure.
Business profile
Verizon is a large U.S. communications carrier organized mainly around Consumer and Business segments. Its Consumer segment supplies wireless services, wireless equipment, fixed wireless access, Fios fiber internet, video, voice, wholesale network access, and related services.
The Business segment sells wireless and wireline connectivity, fixed wireless access, Fios and other broadband, IoT connectivity, advanced communications, networking, security, managed services, local and long-distance voice, and wholesale services to business, government, and carrier customers.
Scale signals
In 2025, Verizon reported $138.2 billion of consolidated operating revenue and $17.2 billion of net income attributable to Verizon. Consumer produced about 77% of consolidated revenue, with 116 million wireless retail connections including fixed wireless access and 11 million total broadband connections at year-end 2025.
Verizon's market value was about $201.9 billion on May 22, 2026, placing it around rank 70 in StockAnalysis.com's market-cap ranking.
Moat reading
Verizon's moat is built from licensed spectrum, nationwide radio access assets, fiber backhaul, customer relationships, billing infrastructure, retail distribution, regulatory experience, and the operational skill required to run a reliable carrier network at national scale.
That moat is strong but not absolute. Open RAN, open 5G core software, neutral-host models, municipal fiber, fixed wireless alternatives, and decentralized ISP tooling can attack pieces of the stack, but they do not yet replace Verizon's integrated coverage, device financing, support, spectrum holdings, and emergency-grade reliability for mainstream consumers.
Decentralization reading
Verizon is structurally centralized: customers depend on a single carrier for access policy, pricing, SIM provisioning, billing, network management, and customer support. Spectrum licensing and capital intensity make full peer-to-peer substitution difficult.
The most credible decentralization path is decomposition rather than total replacement: community-owned last-mile networks, open router firmware, local fiber co-ops, open 5G cores, shared small cells, and automated settlement between local operators could reduce dependence on a national vertically integrated carrier in targeted geographies.
Products
Where the moat actually touches users
These pages zoom into the products and services that matter most to each company, the alternatives already nibbling at them, and 4 structured disruption concepts across the current product set.
Wireless telecommunications
2 conceptsVerizon Wireless is Verizon's national mobile service business, offering postpaid and prepaid wireless connectivity, devices, fixed wireless access, and related consumer and business services.
Fiber broadband
2 conceptsFios is Verizon's fiber-based home connectivity portfolio, offering residential internet, video, voice, and related home services in parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern United States plus Washington, D.C.
Technology waves
Strategic lenses
These are the repo's explicit bias terms: the technologies expected to keep making incumbents less inevitable over time.
Proof-of-work economics, programmable payment flows, and anti-spam pricing make more digital systems capable of rewarding signal while resisting abuse.
- • Platforms that monetize gatekeeping could face pressure from protocol-native payment and reputation layers.
- • Micropayments can replace some ad-funded or subscription-heavy distribution models.
- • Open systems with credible anti-spam economics deserve a higher decentralizability score than legacy software assumptions suggest.
Paper trail
Visible evidence trail
These sources shaped the scoring and writing. The site is opinionated, but it should not behave like it is improvising facts in a dark room.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission · regulatory filing
Primary source for Verizon's 2025 revenue, net income, segment descriptions, wireless connections, broadband connections, Fios footprint, and fixed wireless access disclosures.
Reviewed 2026-05-25
StockAnalysis.com · market data
Market data source for Verizon's approximate May 2026 market capitalization and ranking.
Reviewed 2026-05-25