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Verizon Wireless to pay $10B dividend to parents

Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group will get the long-awaited dividend early next year.

Roger Cheng Former Executive Editor / Head of News
Roger Cheng (he/him/his) was the executive editor in charge of CNET News, managing everything from daily breaking news to in-depth investigative packages. Prior to this, he was on the telecommunications beat and wrote for Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal for nearly a decade and got his start writing and laying out pages at a local paper in Southern California. He's a devoted Trojan alum and thinks sleep is the perfect -- if unattainable -- hobby for a parent.
Expertise Mobile, 5G, Big Tech, Social Media Credentials
  • SABEW Best in Business 2011 Award for Breaking News Coverage, Eddie Award in 2020 for 5G coverage, runner-up National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Award for culture analysis.
Roger Cheng

Verizon Wireless said yesterday it plans to pay a $10 billion dividend to its two parents, Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group, early next year.

Verizon Wireless

The long-awaited payout comes after years of clamoring from Vodafone shareholders, who felt they had received little from the cash-generating machine that is Verizon Wireless. Over the past few years, Verizon, which owns a 55 percent stake in the wireless business, has used the cash to fund other initiatives, including the purchase of spectrum and the acquisition of Alltel.

Based on their respective ownership positions, Verizon will get $5.5 billion and Vodafone will get $4.5 billion in dividends.

Verizon, meanwhile, needs its portion of the cash to fund its own dividend to shareholders. Verizon executives have said over the past year that it had planned a dividend for 2012.

While the payment had been widely expected, it was slightly lower than expected, according to Barclays Capital analyst James Ratcliffe. He estimated that Verizon Wireless will have $13 billion on hand by the end of the year.

Over the past few years, Verizon and Vodafone's partnership has grown from a purely financial one to one based on mutual technological and strategic perspectives. The companies are both moving to a 4G wireless standard called LTE. More recently, they have begun working together to sell communications services to multinational companies based all over the world.