TELUS (TSE:T – Free Report) (NYSE:TU) had its price objective trimmed by Royal Bank Of Canada from C$23.00 to C$22.00 in a research report report published on Thursday morning,BayStreet.CA reports. The firm currently has an outperform rating on the stock.
A number of other equities analysts have also weighed in on T. Scotiabank decreased their target price on TELUS from C$22.50 to C$22.00 and set an “outperform” rating on the stock in a research note on Tuesday, January 20th. ATB Cormark Capital Markets reduced their price objective on TELUS from C$20.00 to C$19.00 and set a “sector perform” rating on the stock in a research report on Friday, February 13th. TD Securities lowered TELUS from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating and reduced their price objective for the company from C$21.00 to C$19.00 in a research report on Thursday, April 2nd. Canaccord Genuity Group lowered TELUS from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating and reduced their price objective for the company from C$21.00 to C$17.50 in a research report on Thursday. Finally, Desjardins reduced their price objective on TELUS from C$23.00 to C$21.50 and set a “buy” rating on the stock in a research report on Tuesday, April 7th. Three analysts have rated the stock with a Buy rating, five have given a Hold rating and one has given a Sell rating to the stock. According to MarketBeat.com, TELUS currently has a consensus rating of “Hold” and a consensus target price of C$20.45.
Check Out Our Latest Stock Report on T
TELUS Price Performance
TELUS (TSE:T – Get Free Report) (NYSE:TU) last announced its earnings results on Thursday, February 12th. The company reported C$0.20 earnings per share for the quarter. The business had revenue of C$5.23 billion for the quarter. TELUS had a return on equity of 7.68% and a net margin of 5.47%. As a group, equities analysts anticipate that TELUS will post 1.2267985 EPS for the current fiscal year.
Key Headlines Impacting TELUS
Here are the key news stories impacting TELUS this week:
- Positive Sentiment: Royal Bank of Canada kept an “outperform” rating despite trimming its price target from C$23.00 to C$22.00, implying continued upside from current levels and providing an institutional vote of confidence. RBC lowers PT but keeps outperform
- Positive Sentiment: Desjardins reiterated a Buy on TELUS, which supports demand for the shares versus peers and helps underpin the stock amid broader analyst churn. Desjardins remains a buy
- Neutral Sentiment: Aggregate analyst coverage shows an average “Hold” recommendation, indicating consensus caution and limited near-term analyst-driven upside. Analysts give TELUS average Hold
- Neutral Sentiment: Desjardins trimmed its price target to C$21.50 — a downgrade in upside but still above current trading, so it moderates expectations without flipping sentiment to outright negative. Desjardins lowers PT to C$21.50
- Negative Sentiment: Canaccord Genuity downgraded TELUS from “Buy” to “Hold” and cut its target to C$17.50, narrowing upside and signaling increased near‑term risk from a formerly bullish analyst. Canaccord downgrades to Hold, PT C$17.50
- Negative Sentiment: Analyst commentary collected by TipRanks highlights slower growth, mounting competitive pressure and dividend uncertainty — factors likely to keep a lid on the multiple investors are willing to pay. TipRanks: slower growth & dividend uncertainty
- Negative Sentiment: Quebecor is increasingly cited as a top competitive threat to Rogers, TELUS and Bell, raising execution and market‑share risk in key Canadian markets. Quebecor called top threat to incumbents
- Negative Sentiment: TELUS announced it shed roughly 2,800 Canadian jobs in 2025 as it pivots toward AI and international growth — a signal of cost-cutting but also of structural transition and domestic pressure on revenue/operations. TELUS job cuts 2,800
TELUS Company Profile
Telus is one of the Big Three wireless service providers in Canada, with its 9 million mobile phone subscribers nationwide constituting about 30% of the total market. It is the incumbent local exchange carrier in the western Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Alberta, where it provides internet, television, and landline phone services. It also has a small wireline presence in eastern Quebec. In recent years Telus has moved to bring fiber to the home over most of its wireline footprint as it upgrades its legacy copper network, leaving it able to compete on more equal footing with cable providers.
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