AT&T (NYSE: T) is seeing pressure on Wednesday morning despite posting Q1 earnings that many would describe as “fired on all cylinders”.

The telecommunications giant delivered a clean sweep: earnings were better than expected, revenue landed ahead of estimates, and the operating margin improved significantly to 21.1%.

Plus, the company rewarded loyalists with $2.3 billion in share buybacks and maintained a dividend of $0.2275 per share as well. Subscriber growth also surged, outperforming last year’s figures. 

Yet, the post-earnings weakness in AT&T stock is not without reason. Investors are bailing on the NYSE-listed firm on Apr. 22 because of the following two concerns.

AT&T stock is unattractive due to a massive debt pile

The primary reason why T shares are in “red” today is the sheer weight of the firm’s balance sheet.

While the operational numbers were stellar, AT&T’s underlying financial structure remains heavily levered.

Total debt climbed to an alarming “$138.4 billion” in Q1 – spooking institutional investors given a “higher for longer” interest rate environment.

Much of this increase is related to the company’s recent acquisition of Lumen Technologies’ mass-market fiber assets – a transaction experts view as strategically necessary for growth but expensive to execute.

In a market that’s increasingly prioritizing fortress balance sheets, rising debt often offsets even the most impressive subscriber gains, leading to a “sell the news” reaction.

Free cash flow conundrum weighs on T shares

Despite the headline earnings beat, the “lifeblood” of a dividend-paying utility like AT&T is really its free cash flow (FCF) – and the recently concluded quarter left a bit to be desired on that front.

Q1 free cash flow came in at $2.5 billion, a significant step down from the $3.1 billion reported in the same quarter last year.

This decline was largely due to the absence of DIRECTV distributions, which had previously acted as a reliable cash spigot.

While management was quick to reiterate its full-year FCF guidance of over $18 billion, the market currently appears to be in a “show me” mood.

Until T proves its capex on 5G and fiber are yielding immediate, liquid returns to bridge that gap, AT&T shares may struggle to find a solid floor.

How to play AT&T after Q1 earnings

Ultimately, today’s price action reflects the growing pains of a company in the middle of a massive identity shift.

AT&T Inc is shedding its “conglomerate” skin to become a pure-play connectivity powerhouse, as evidenced by the 25.3% decline in legacy copper revenue and the concurrent boom in fiber.

However, this transition is capital-intensive and fraught with execution risks.

T stock investors are currently weighing the long-term potential of a dominant 5G/Fiber ecosystem against the immediate realities of high interest payments and shifting cash flow dynamics.

While the quarter “fired on all cylinders” operationally, the market is signaling that it needs more than just growth – it demands a leaner, meaner financial profile before it rewards AT&T with a higher multiple.

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