A Rare Bright Spot in a Down Market
While most of Wall Street is seeing red, AT&T Inc. (T) is doing its own thing. Shares climbed roughly 0.4% on Wednesday, a modest gain that becomes more impressive when you consider the context. The S&P 500 dropped 0.25%, the Nasdaq fell 0.27%, and even the Communication Services sector that AT&T belongs to slipped 0.1%. The Dow Jones and Russell 2000 weren't spared either, down 0.27% and 0.34% respectively.
So what's driving AT&T's relative resilience? It appears to be investor sentiment rather than any specific catalyst or breaking news. Sometimes a stock just attracts buying interest when others don't, and today seems to be one of those days for the telecom giant. The company-specific strength stands out in what's otherwise a broadly bearish trading session.
Wall Street Likes AT&T, Just Not as Much as Before
Recent analyst activity tells an interesting story: the ratings remain positive, but expectations are getting dialed back. Citigroup analyst Michael Rollins kept his Buy rating on AT&T while trimming his price target from $32 down to $29. Goldman Sachs analyst Michael Ng made a similar move, maintaining his Buy rating but dropping his target from $33 to $29.
Morgan Stanley's Simon Flannery followed suit with an Overweight rating and a reduced price target from $32 to $30. Perhaps most notable, Wolfe Research analyst Peter Supino actually downgraded the stock from Outperform to Peer Perform, suggesting AT&T may no longer outpace its competitors.
The pattern is clear: analysts still see value here, but the enthusiasm has cooled somewhat. That said, the consensus remains a Buy rating with an average price target of $30.07, which would represent meaningful upside from current levels.
Reading the Technical Tea Leaves
The technical picture for AT&T is, well, complicated. The stock is trading 1.2% above its 20-day simple moving average, suggesting some near-term momentum. But zoom out and you'll see it's still 6.5% below its 100-day moving average, pointing to longer-term headwinds. Over the past year, shares have climbed about 9.46%, a respectable if unspectacular performance.
The RSI sits at 49.71, firmly in neutral territory where neither bulls nor bears have the upper hand. Meanwhile, the MACD indicator is above its signal line, typically a bullish sign that suggests positive momentum building. It's a mixed bag, really. The stock isn't overbought, but it does have some wind at its back.
Traders are watching two key levels: resistance at $26.00 and support at $24.00. Those markers will likely define the trading range in the near term.
The Earnings Report Everyone's Waiting For
Mark your calendars for January 28, 2026, when AT&T reports its next quarterly results. Analysts are expecting EPS of $0.47, which would actually be a decline from $0.54 in the same quarter last year. Not great, but the revenue picture looks better. Estimates call for $32.85 billion in revenue, up from $32.30 billion year-over-year.
That revenue growth is worth noting because it suggests the business fundamentals remain solid even if profit margins face pressure. The average analyst price target of $30.07 implies significant upside potential from where the stock trades now, assuming the company can deliver on expectations.
Where AT&T Shows Up in Your ETFs
If you own certain ETFs, you've got AT&T exposure whether you realize it or not. The Communication Services Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLC) holds AT&T at a 4.30% weight. The Invesco S&P Ultra Dividend Revenue ETF (RDIV) has a 4.70% allocation, while the 6 Meridian Hedged Equity-Index Option Strategy ETF (SIXH) gives it a 5.07% weight.
These aren't trivial positions. When AT&T moves, these funds feel it. So if you're invested in any of these ETFs, today's action in AT&T is affecting your portfolio performance, even if you didn't directly buy the stock.
The Bottom Line
T Price Action: AT&T shares were up 0.46% at $24.92 at the time of publication on Wednesday.
In a market where everything seems to be going down, AT&T is managing to eke out a gain. It's not a moonshot, but relative strength matters. With analysts still rating it a Buy despite lowered price targets, mixed technical signals, and earnings on the horizon, AT&T is offering investors plenty to think about. Whether this momentum continues will likely depend on how those January earnings shake out and whether the broader market finds its footing.




