American Tower stock is trading around $177 — near a five-year valuation low — but Bernstein thinks the market is pricing in risks that may never fully materialize.
American Tower Corporation, AMT
The research firm upgraded AMT from “Market-Perform” to “Outperform” on May 19, maintaining its $207 price target. That implies roughly 17% upside from the stock’s May 18 closing price of $177.28.
Analyst Madison Rezaei led the report, arguing that three major concerns hanging over the stock — satellite competition, interest rate pressure, and Dish Network fallout — have been blown out of proportion.
On the satellite front, Bernstein said direct-to-device (D2D) technology is unlikely to replace traditional tower infrastructure. Capacity limits, poor indoor coverage, and performance gaps in dense cities mean satellite services will probably need to partner with mobile operators — which could actually lift tower demand over time.
Interest rate fears get a similar treatment. Bernstein pointed out that AMT has already cut its floating-rate debt to roughly $1.4 billion, with most maturities pushed out to 2028. Its credit profile and defensive business model should help absorb the impact of higher Treasury yields.
The Dish Network situation, long a drag on sentiment, also has a potential buffer. Bernstein noted that AMT has already stripped Dish revenues from its financial outlook. A newly established $2.4 billion FCC escrow fund could reimburse infrastructure providers hit by Dish defaults — giving the stock a recovery floor that investors may not be fully crediting.
The core thesis rests on AMT’s portfolio of roughly 149,000 towers across developed markets. Bernstein described the business as generating steady cash flows, long-term leases, and predictable growth — with around 5% AFFO growth even after accounting for Dish churn, foreign exchange, and refinancing costs.
That operating resilience showed up in the latest earnings report. AMT posted Q1 EPS of $2.84, well ahead of the $1.60 analyst consensus. Revenue came in at $2.74 billion, beating forecasts of $2.66 billion and up 6.8% year over year.
Management also raised the quarterly dividend to $1.79 per share, up from $1.70. That annualizes to $7.16 per share and a 4.0% yield.
Institutional investors clearly haven’t lost faith. North Dakota State Investment Board opened a new position in the fourth quarter, picking up 16,041 AMT shares for approximately $2.8 million. Several other funds added to existing positions over the same period. Institutional ownership currently stands at 92.69%.
Analyst sentiment is broadly constructive. Raymond James has a “Strong Buy” and a $240 target. JPMorgan is “Overweight” with a $240 target, though recently trimmed from $245. Jefferies rates it “Buy” with a $210 target. Mizuho upgraded to “Outperform” in April with a $205 target.
The consensus sits at “Moderate Buy” with an average price target of $216.20 — about 22% above current levels.
FY 2026 guidance calls for EPS of $10.90 to $11.07. The stock has a 52-week range of $165.08 to $234.33.
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