Telus: Buy, Sell, or Hold in 2026?
Alex Smith
3 hours ago
There are some stocks in the market that are very difficult to assess. On the one side, investors who have been bearish may have been directionally correct in recent months. However, with some companies like Telus (TSX:T) still retaining very strong customer retention and a cash-producing core business, the question is how much to make into such recent declines.
Indeed, this recent decline is a notable one, particularly over the past four years. Let’s dive into whether investors may want to consider the recent bump as a buying opportunity, why I think this stock is a hold right now, but could be a speculative buy for some investors.
There’s still an investing thesis here
Telus continues to put up the kind of operating metrics dividend investors like to see. In 2025, the company added more than one million mobile and fixed customer additions. This amounted to industryâleading net adds for a fourth straight year. Postpaid churn remains below 1%, underscoring a sticky customer base and strong networkâplusâservice bundle. That customer growth is showing up in cash generation, with adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) up about 3% in 2025 and record free cash flow of roughly 11% year over year to about $2.2 billion.
Managementâs 2026 playbook is essentially âstabilize and grow.â The Telus team is now guiding to 2â4% consolidated serviceârevenue and adjusted earnings before interest and taxes growth, while trimming capital expenditures (capex) to about $2.3 billion. That’s roughly 10% below 2025 levels.
Given this lower capital intensity, paired with solid midâsingleâdigit EBITDA growth, I think investors looking for free cash flow to grind higher and gradually deârisk the balance sheet may have something to grasp onto here.
A dividend that’s still potentially worth considering
For income investors, Telusâs dividend remains the headline draw, with a yield in the highâsingleâdigit range around 9%. On a cashâflow basis, the payout is more manageable, with a payout ratio of roughly 45% of cash flow. However, earningsâbased payout ratios north of 150% highlight how dependent the dividend is on continued free cash flow (FCF) growth and low capital spending. Management has already paused dividend growth and is explicitly targeting a 75% FCF payout and netâdebtâtoâEBITDA of about 3.3 times by the end of 2026, from roughly 3.5 times today.
That combination tells you two things: the current dividend looks reasonably covered by cash generation, but there is almost no room for operational missteps or another leg higher in rates. If Telus can hit its modest growth and capex targets, investors could get paid handsomely to wait for a slow deâleveraging story.
The bottom line
I don’t think Telus is a screaming buy right now. In fact, there are reasons the market is hesitant to fully reârate this name. Fourthâquarter 2025 results missed expectations, with earnings per share of $0.20 versus the $0.25 forecast and revenue about 3% below consensus. To me, this reflects pressure on wireless average revenue per user and weaker equipment sales. High leverage in a capitalâintensive sector and ongoing 5G/AI buildâout needs mean Telus canât simply starve capex to protect the dividend indefinitely.
Put it together, and Telus screens as a fundamentally sound, cashâgenerative telco at a discounted valuation, but with balance sheet and execution risk that justifies some caution. For existing shareholders, thatâs a hold. For new money, this could be a stock to consider accumulating gradually on pullbacks rather than chasing aggressively on shortâterm strength.
The post Telus: Buy, Sell, or Hold in 2026? appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- A Dividend Giant I’d Buy Over Telus Stock Right Now
- 1 TSX Dividend Stock Down 20% to Buy Now
- The Best TSX Stocks to Buy Now if You Want Both Income and Growth
- How to Make Money in a TFSA With Dividend Stocks
- 1 Canadian Dividend Stock Down 20% to Buy and Hold Forever
Fool contributor Chris MacDonald has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends TELUS. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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