T-Mobile US Inc.
TMUSBusiness Overview
title: "TMUS Step 01 — Business Overview" ticker: TMUS company: "T-Mobile US, Inc." source: coverage-next-full step: "01" created: 2026-05-27
Step 01 — Business Overview: T-Mobile US, Inc. (TMUS)
1. Executive Summary
T-Mobile US is the largest US wireless carrier by postpaid subscriber net additions and commands approximately 35% of the national wireless market [S9]. It operates a nationwide 5G and 4G LTE network serving 139.9 million total customer connections as of Q3 2025 [S5]. The company's value proposition rests on a combination of superior mid-band 5G network performance, aggressive pricing ("Un-carrier" brand positioning), and a growing home broadband business (9.4M FWA customers by end-2025) [S5].
The post-Sprint merger (completed April 2020) transformed TMUS from a challenger carrier into the clear network technology leader — a transformation visible in EBITDA margin expanding from ~25% to 36% (FY 2022→FY 2025) and FCF growing from $2.8B to $18.0B over the same period [S6].
2. Corporate History & Structure
- 1994: Western Wireless Corporation founded
- 2002: Deutsche Telekom acquires VoiceStream, creates T-Mobile USA brand
- 2013: T-Mobile USA merges with MetroPCS Communications (MetroPCS CIK: 0001283699 inherited); TMUS becomes public on NASDAQ
- 2020: Sprint merger completed (April 2020); creates "New T-Mobile" with $88B in assets
- 2025: UScellular acquisition closes (August 2025, $4.3B); Gopalan becomes CEO (November 2025)
- Present: ~1,107M shares outstanding; Deutsche Telekom AG holds ~43–48% stake [S7]
3. Business Segments
T-Mobile operates as a single reportable segment (wireless telecommunications), but revenue decomposes into economically distinct streams:
Revenue Stream Breakdown (FY 2025)
| Stream | Estimated Revenue | Margin Profile | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Branded Postpaid Service | ~$57-60B | High (~40-50% EBITDA) | Core value driver; ARPA growth engine |
| Branded Prepaid Service | ~$9-10B | Medium (~25-30%) | Metro by T-Mobile brand |
| Wholesale & Other Service | ~$3-5B | Medium | MVNO roaming, business services |
| Equipment (handsets) | ~$12-15B | Near-zero or slightly negative | Pass-through; often bundled at subsidy |
| Total | $88.3B | 36% EBITDA | Service revenue is the economically relevant metric |
Note: Equipment revenue is economically pass-through — T-Mobile sells phones at subsidized prices and recovers through service agreements. Service revenue (~$72B+ estimated) is the correct basis for EBITDA analysis.
4. Value-Chain Layer Map
Customer Acquisition & Retention
↓
Brand / Un-carrier Marketing → Metro by T-Mobile (prepaid)
→ T-Mobile flagship (postpaid)
→ T-Mobile for Business (enterprise)
↓
Network Services Layer
┌─ 5G (mid-band 2.5 GHz UC, low-band 600 MHz, mmWave hotspots)
├─ 4G LTE (legacy + fallback)
├─ Wi-Fi Offload (residential broadband)
└─ Fixed Wireless Access (5G Home Internet)
↓
Network Infrastructure
┌─ Spectrum Licenses ($101.9B intangible assets, primarily spectrum) [S2]
├─ Cell Tower Leases (~$30.2B operating lease liability) [S1]
├─ Owned Network Equipment (PP&E)
└─ Sprint-acquired 2.5 GHz mid-band portfolio
↓
Wholesale & Roaming
├─ MVNO wholesale (resellers use T-Mobile network)
└─ International roaming agreements
5. Product Portfolio
| Product | Description | Competitive Position |
|---|---|---|
| T-Mobile Postpaid | Flagship consumer/business wireless plans | #1 in net adds; strong value-for-money positioning |
| Metro by T-Mobile | Prepaid brand (formerly MetroPCS) | #1 US prepaid brand by subscribers |
| T-Mobile for Business | Enterprise wireless, IoT, private 5G | Growing; historically weaker than VZ/AT&T in enterprise |
| 5G Home Internet | Fixed Wireless Access broadband | 9.4M customers; disrupting cable at ~$50/month |
| T-Mobile CONNECT | Budget prepaid | Basic coverage tier |
| Fiber JV (future) | Partnering on fiber broadband buildout | Pre-revenue; 12-15M homes targeted by 2030 |
6. Customer Segmentation
| Segment | Key Metrics | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| Postpaid Phone | ~90M+ subscribers | Growing: industry-leading net adds |
| Postpaid Other (tablets, watches, IoT) | ~30M+ connections | Growing |
| Branded Prepaid | ~20M+ subscribers | Stable; pressure from eSIM/cable MVNOs |
| Broadband (FWA) | 9.4M end-2025 | Growing rapidly: +2.0M in 2025 |
| Wholesale | Several million | Stable/growing (sub-leasing network capacity) |
7. Business Model Economics
Unit economics formula:
- Revenue per account (ARPA): postpaid ARPA growing ~5% in 2025 YoY from rate plan optimizations [S9]
- Churn: postpaid phone churn ~0.89% Q3 2025 — industry low [S5]
- Customer Lifetime Value: high (low churn × multi-year ARPA × rising ARPU per device)
- Variable cost: primarily handset cost of equipment + service costs
- Fixed cost leverage: spectrum, towers, and network equipment are largely sunk → incremental subscribers have high contribution margin
Margin Tree (top-level):
- Revenue: $88.3B (FY 2025)
- Less: Cost of Service (network ops, tower leases): ~$32-33B
- Gross Profit: $55.5B (62.9% GM) [S6]
- Less: SG&A (~$24-25B including customer acquisition)
- EBITDA: $31.8B (36.0% margin)
- Less: D&A ($13.5B — primarily spectrum amortization and PP&E) [S1]
- EBIT: $18.3B (20.7% EBIT margin)
8. Strategic Position
T-Mobile's identity has shifted from "challenger/disruptor" (pre-2020) to "market leader facing challenger dynamics from below" (2025+). As the operator with the best 5G network by speed and coverage metrics [S9], the company now defends while expanding into adjacent markets (broadband, fiber, enterprise). CEO Gopalan (former DT executive) inherits a cash machine but faces the strategic challenge of sustaining premium growth rates as the business matures.
Source Index
| Ref | Source |
|---|---|
| S1 | SEC EDGAR XBRL, CIK 0001283699, TMUS financials |
| S2 | T-Mobile 10-K FY 2025, filed 2026-02-11 |
| S5 | T-Mobile Q3 2025 earnings press release, T-Mobile Newsroom |
| S6 | StockAnalysis.com TMUS income statement |
| S7 | MarketBeat TMUS institutional ownership |
| S9 | Web research: market share data, Ookla/Opensignal network reports, ainvest.com analysis |
Financial Snapshot
title: "TMUS Step 04 — Financial Quality & Adversarial Sweep" ticker: TMUS company: "T-Mobile US, Inc." source: coverage-next-full step: "04" created: 2026-05-27
Step 04 — Financial Quality: T-Mobile US, Inc. (TMUS)
1. Executive Summary
T-Mobile's financial statements are clean and straightforward for a capital-intensive telecom. The largest quality issue is the magnitude of intangible assets ($101.9B — primarily spectrum licenses and customer relationships from the Sprint acquisition), which make GAAP book value and GAAP earnings less informative than EBITDA and FCF. The company's FCF ramp ($1.6B in FY 2021 → $18.0B in FY 2025) is genuine and driven by completion of the Sprint network integration capex cycle, not accounting manipulation.
2. Statement-Quality Adjustments
Key Non-Cash / Non-Recurring Items
| Item | FY 2025 | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| D&A (spectrum + PP&E amortization) | $13,508M | Largest non-cash charge; overwhelms GAAP net income |
| SBC | $829M | Genuine economic cost; add back to get to EBITDA but note real dilution |
| Sprint merger integration costs | ~$0 (now complete) | Was significant 2020-2023; no longer material [S2] |
| Spectrum repack charges | Disclosed separately | Regulatory compliance; non-recurring |
| UScellular acquisition-related costs | ~$2.6B total integration cost over ~2 years [S9] | Will appear 2025-2027 |
EBITDA vs. GAAP Net Income Reconciliation (FY 2025)
GAAP Net Income: $10,992M
+ Income Tax: $3,289M
+ D&A: $13,508M
+ Interest Expense: ~$3,500-4,000M (estimated)
= EBITDA: ~$31,789-32,289M (reported EBITDA: $31,787M per StockAnalysis [S6])
The wide EBITDA-Net Income gap ($20.8B difference) is structural — it reflects the heavily capitalized nature of spectrum and network assets. The GAAP P/E (~19-21x) significantly understates TMUS's economic value; EV/EBITDA (~9.5-10x) is more meaningful.
Adjustments for Free Cash Flow
| Component | FY 2025 | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Operating Cash Flow | $27,950M | Includes working capital benefits from EIP receivables |
| Less: Capex | ($9,955M) | Down from $13.97B peak (2022) post-integration |
| = FCF | $17,995M | Genuine; growing strongly |
| Less: EIP receivable securitization | Net neutral | Not a hidden capex |
FCF quality assessment: HIGH — The ramp is real, driven by capex declining from integration-peak ($13.97B in 2022) as Sprint network migration completed. No aggressive working capital manipulation detected.
Revenue Recognition
- Service revenue recognized monthly as service is delivered (ASC 606)
- Equipment revenue recognized at point of sale or over contract term for MVNO
- Bundled service + device arrangements: allocated using standalone selling prices
- No aggressive recognition patterns detected [S2]
Lease Accounting (IFRS vs. US GAAP)
- Operating leases ($30.2B liability [S1]) are off EBITDA but captured in FCF (lease payments in operating activities per US GAAP ASC 842)
- Finance leases ($2.27B liability [S1]) are partially in D&A
- Total lease-adjusted Net Debt: $122.3B (vs. book debt-only ~$86.3B)
- Investors and rating agencies use gross debt + lease obligations for leverage analysis
3. Balance Sheet Quality
| Metric | Value (FY 2025) | Quality Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Cash | $5.6B | Adequate for operational needs |
| Intangibles (spectrum) | $101.9B | 46% of total assets; real economic value (spectrum licenses) [S2] |
| Goodwill | $13.7B | Sprint acquisition goodwill; no impairment to date [S1] |
| Net PP&E | est. ~$35-40B | Network equipment, towers, etc. |
| Total Assets | $219.2B | |
| Total Debt (book) | ~$86.3B LT + ~$3-4B current | |
| Lease Obligations | ~$32.5B | $30.2B operating + $2.3B finance |
| Total Capital (debt + equity) | ~$181.5B | Net debt $116.7B; equity $59.2B |
Key quality flags:
- Goodwill of $13.7B: Sprint acquisition goodwill; tested annually; no impairment since 2020 merger. A significant downside scenario could trigger impairment but is not imminent given financial performance [S1]
- Spectrum value: $101.9B in intangibles is predominantly spectrum licenses with indefinite useful lives (not amortized, only tested for impairment). This is an economic asset but creates book accounting opacity.
4. Cash Flow Quality
| Metric | FY 2025 | FY 2024 | FY 2023 | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OCF/EBITDA | 88% | 72% | 68% | HIGH — OCF closely tracks EBITDA |
| FCF/Net Income | 164% | 119% | 105% | D&A non-cash; FCF > net income structurally |
| Capex/Revenue | 11.3% | 10.9% | 12.5% | Declining capex intensity post-Sprint integration |
| Capex/D&A | 74% | 68% | 76% | Maintenance-level capex + selective growth |
FCF ramp validation:
- FY 2021: $1.6B FCF; Sprint integration still heavy
- FY 2022: $2.8B FCF; integration winding down
- FY 2023: $8.8B FCF; meaningful improvement
- FY 2024: $13.5B FCF; strong ramp
- FY 2025: $18.0B FCF; approach maturity
This ramp is the single most important financial fact about TMUS. It is validated by declining capex (not accounting tricks) and improving operating leverage on a nearly fixed cost base.
5. Adversarial Research Sweep
5.1 Short Seller / Bear Reports
No prominent short-seller reports (Hindenburg, Muddy Waters, Citron Research) specifically targeting TMUS have been published in 2023-2026. The company is widely held and well-covered; this is consistent with a clean fundamental story without fraud/accounting risk.
Bear case from consensus analysis [S8, S10]:
- Capital intensity concern: UScellular integration ($2.6B over 2 years) and fiber JV commitments add capex drag
- Market saturation: US wireless >100% penetrated; future revenue growth requires share theft or price increases (latter risks brand identity)
- Valuation premium: TMUS trades at 2x+ the EV/EBITDA of VZ/T; this requires sustained superior growth
- CEO transition risk: Gopalan replaces Sievert (Nov 2025); execution continuity uncertain
5.2 Regulatory Investigations / FCC Actions
- UScellular conditions: FCC/DOJ approved UScellular deal with conditions (Aug 2025); T-Mobile must maintain wholesale access for UScellular markets for a period [S9]
- AST SpaceMobile dispute: T-Mobile filed FCC complaint against AST SpaceMobile over potential interference concerns; resolution pending [S9]
- Sprint merger consent decrees: Obligations to build out rural areas, offer discounted plans to eligible consumers; most obligations substantially met by 2024 [S2]
- No material ongoing DOJ antitrust investigations found in SEC filings [S2]
5.3 Litigation
- Class action lawsuits: None identified as material in recent 10-K filings [S2]
- T-Mobile data breach (2021, 2022, 2023): Multiple significant data breaches exposed millions of customer records. T-Mobile settled a 2021 data breach class action for $350M in 2022. FCC and FTC investigations followed. T-Mobile has invested heavily in cybersecurity since.
- Risk: Ongoing breach liability exposure; regulatory fines remain possible. However, this is a known risk now being actively managed.
- Antitrust exposure: As the market leader by net adds, TMUS faces greater regulatory scrutiny on future M&A than in the Sprint era.
5.4 Related-Party Transactions
- Deutsche Telekom AG: ~43-48% owner; placed CEO Gopalan; has board representation; standard parent-subsidiary commercial relationships (e.g., international roaming, technology sharing). No evidence of value extraction from minority shareholders; DT is aligned as a long-term holder. [S4]
- T-Mobile/DT spectrum sharing: DT allowed TMUS to use DT-held spectrum in certain arrangements; disclosed in 10-K as related party. Arms-length pricing asserted. [S2]
5.5 Accounting Red Flags Screen
| Red Flag | Status |
|---|---|
| Revenue recognition manipulation | NONE — straightforward subscription model |
| Goodwill impairment risk | LOW — performance supports current valuations |
| EIP receivable off-balance-sheet | MONITORED — securitization program transparent; disclosed in 10-K |
| Undisclosed liabilities | NONE found in SEC filings |
| Related-party self-dealing | LOW — DT relationship is standard, well-disclosed |
| Data breach liability | ONGOING — cybersecurity investment made; residual FCC/FTC risk |
Overall Financial Quality: HIGH. T-Mobile's statements are clean; the FCF ramp is genuine; the largest complexity is lease accounting and intangible-heavy balance sheet, both of which are industry-standard for facilities-based telecom.
Source Index
| Ref | Source |
|---|---|
| S1 | SEC EDGAR XBRL, CIK 0001283699 — balance sheet metrics |
| S2 | T-Mobile 10-K FY 2025, filed 2026-02-11 — MD&A, litigation disclosures |
| S4 | T-Mobile DEF 14A 2026 — related party disclosures |
| S6 | StockAnalysis.com TMUS — income statement, EBITDA |
| S8 | Analyst consensus and bear case summaries |
| S9 | Web research: UScellular acquisition details, FCC regulatory actions |
| S10 | finviz.com, SimplyWallSt.com — bear case analysis synthesis |
Deeper Financial Analysis
The fundamental tier adds 9 additional research dimensions for $TMUS.