American Tower shares are hovering near $177 — a five-year valuation trough — yet Bernstein believes the Street is overestimating risks that may not come to pass.
American Tower Corporation, AMT
The investment firm elevated AMT from “Market-Perform” to “Outperform” on May 19, reaffirming its $207 price objective. Based on the May 18 close of $177.28, that target represents approximately 17% upside.
Lead analyst Madison Rezaei authored the upgrade note, contending that three key worries weighing on the stock — satellite disruption, rising borrowing costs, and Dish Network liabilities — are overblown.
Regarding satellite threats, Bernstein maintains that direct-to-device (D2D) technology won’t displace conventional tower assets. Coverage limitations, weak indoor penetration, and subpar performance in urban environments suggest satellite providers will need to collaborate with wireless carriers — potentially boosting tower utilization rather than undermining it.
Interest rate anxieties receive comparable pushback. Bernstein highlighted that AMT has already reduced floating-rate obligations to roughly $1.4 billion, with the bulk of debt maturities extended to 2028. The company’s solid credit standing and recession-resistant operations should cushion the blow from elevated Treasury yields.
The Dish Network issue, which has weighed on investor sentiment for months, also comes with built-in safeguards. Bernstein observed that AMT has already excluded Dish-related revenues from guidance. Additionally, a newly created $2.4 billion FCC escrow mechanism could compensate infrastructure vendors affected by Dish payment failures — providing downside protection that may not be reflected in current valuations.
The investment case centers on AMT’s ownership of approximately 149,000 tower sites spanning developed economies. Bernstein characterized the operation as producing reliable cash generation, extended lease contracts, and consistent expansion — projecting roughly 5% AFFO growth even after factoring in Dish customer losses, currency fluctuations, and financing expenses.
That operational strength was evident in recent quarterly results. AMT delivered Q1 EPS of $2.84, substantially exceeding the $1.60 Street estimate. Revenue totaled $2.74 billion, surpassing expectations of $2.66 billion and marking 6.8% year-over-year growth.
Executives also increased the quarterly payout to $1.79 per share from $1.70. On an annualized basis, that translates to $7.16 per share with a 4.0% yield.
Institutional investors remain engaged. North Dakota State Investment Board initiated a fresh stake during Q4, acquiring 16,041 AMT shares valued at roughly $2.8 million. Multiple other asset managers expanded holdings during the same timeframe. Institutional ownership currently represents 92.69%.
Analyst views skew positive overall. Raymond James maintains a “Strong Buy” rating with a $240 price objective. JPMorgan holds an “Overweight” stance with a $240 target, though recently lowered from $245. Jefferies carries a “Buy” rating at $210. Mizuho upgraded to “Outperform” in April with a $205 target.
The Wall Street consensus registers as “Moderate Buy” with a mean price target of $216.20 — roughly 22% above present trading levels.
Fiscal 2026 projections call for EPS between $10.90 and $11.07. The stock’s 52-week trading range spans $165.08 to $234.33.
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