Welcome to our dedicated page for Verizon Comms SEC filings (Ticker: VZ), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides structured access to the company’s regulatory disclosures, drawn from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s EDGAR system. Verizon’s common stock is registered on both the New York Stock Exchange and The Nasdaq Global Select Market, and the company also has numerous series of registered notes with maturities extending from the 2020s through the 2050s. These securities are reflected in its Forms 8‑K and related registration statements.
Verizon’s current reports on Form 8‑K and 8‑K/A cover a wide range of topics, including results of operations and financial condition, executive leadership changes, board appointments, compensation arrangements, capital markets transactions and workforce initiatives. For example, recent 8‑K filings describe quarterly earnings releases that include both GAAP and non‑GAAP financial measures such as Consolidated EBITDA, Segment EBITDA, Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted EPS, Net Unsecured Debt and free cash flow, along with detailed explanations of how these metrics are calculated and why management uses them.
Other 8‑K filings document events such as the appointment of a new Chief Executive Officer, the election of new directors, and the approval of equity-based compensation awards in the form of restricted stock units and performance stock units with specified vesting and performance conditions. Verizon has also filed 8‑K reports describing Euro and Sterling Fixed-to-Fixed Rate Junior Subordinated Notes offerings due 2056, sold under an effective shelf registration statement on Form S‑3, and workforce reduction plans that include expected severance charges and reductions in outsourced labor expense.
The filings set also includes a Form 25 related to the removal from listing of a specific series of 3.25% Notes due 2026 from the New York Stock Exchange, illustrating how Verizon and the exchange handle the delisting of individual debt securities. Through these documents, investors can review Verizon’s capital structure, note offerings, non‑GAAP reconciliations, executive compensation terms and cost structure initiatives.
On Stock Titan, Verizon’s 10‑K annual reports, 10‑Q quarterly reports, 8‑K current reports and other filings are supplemented with AI-powered summaries that highlight key points such as segment performance, leverage metrics, liquidity measures and notable risk factors, based on the information disclosed in the filings themselves. Real-time updates from EDGAR help ensure that new VZ filings, including Form 4 insider transaction reports when available, appear promptly. This makes it easier for investors, analysts and other interested readers to navigate lengthy documents, understand Verizon’s financial and governance disclosures, and track changes in its capital markets activity over time.
On 07/31/2025, Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) Chairman & CEO Hans Erik Vestberg filed a Form 4 disclosing the acquisition of additional deferred-compensation units.
- Derivative security: 217.48 phantom-stock units (Code “A”).
- Economic exposure: Units represent cash-settled value linked to 62 VZ common shares; they do not increase the public share count.
- Reference price: $12.20 per phantom unit.
- Post-transaction balance: 195,347.745 phantom units held indirectly in the Verizon Deferred Compensation Plan.
No common shares were bought or sold; the filing reflects routine compensation deferral rather than discretionary investment. Given Verizon’s ~4.2 bn shares outstanding, the 62-share equivalent addition is immaterial and is unlikely to influence trading dynamics or insider-sentiment assessments.
Verizon’s Q2-25 10-Q shows steady top-line growth, margin stability and resilient cash generation. Operating revenue rose 5.2% YoY to $34.5 bn, driven by a 25% jump in wireless equipment sales; service revenue advanced 1.6% to $28.2 bn. Operating income improved 4.5% to $8.2 bn and net income attributable to Verizon climbed 8.9% to $5.0 bn. Diluted EPS increased to $1.18 from $1.09. For 1H-25, revenue grew 3.4% to $68.0 bn while EPS rose 7.3% to $2.34.
Cost discipline offset higher device volumes: SG&A fell 2.6% YoY and cost of services was flat. Operating margin held at 23.7% versus 23.8% a year ago. Cash provided by operations was $16.8 bn (+1%) against capex of $8.0 bn, yielding roughly $8.8 bn of free cash flow. Capex declined 1.5% despite continued C-Band build-out ($234 m spectrum spend).
Balance sheet shows total debt of $146 bn (↑$2.0 bn YTD) and cash of $3.4 bn (↓$0.8 bn). Verizon issued $2.3 bn of 5.25% 2035 notes, completed $3.4 bn of ABS issuances and executed $2.2 bn of note exchanges plus $0.5 bn tenders, partially offset by $4.1 bn redemptions. Equity rose to $104.4 bn.
Strategic moves include the pending $38.50-per-share acquisition of Frontier Communications (regulatory approvals outstanding) and a $1.0 bn deal for select UScellular spectrum. No forward guidance was provided.
Form 4 insider activity summary
Verizon Communications (VZ) Executive Vice President & CFO Anthony T. Skiadas reported the acquisition of 139.163 phantom stock units on 02 July 2025 through the company’s deferred compensation plan at a reference price of $12.44 per unit. Phantom stock is cash-settled and represents the economic value—not actual ownership—of Verizon common shares; the transaction therefore involves no open-market purchase or sale of stock. After the credit, Skiadas indirectly holds 125,343.598 phantom units (by Deferred Compensation Plan), equal to the value of roughly 40 Verizon shares. The filing appears to be a routine deferral of compensation rather than a directional investment signal, and it does not alter his direct common-stock ownership.