In the third quarter, AT&T’s revenue grew by 1.7%, slightly below expectations, but with in-line earnings of 54 cents per share. The company added 405,000 net postpaid mobile phone subscribers and saw strong growth in its broadband business. AT&T expects full-year adjusted EPS to be at the high end of its range, leading to a 2% drop in shares.

T-Mobile US exceeded expectations in Q3, with revenue growing by 8.9% and adjusted EPS beating estimates. The company added 1 million postpaid net mobile phone subscribers and raised guidance for total net additions. Despite this strong performance, shares closed down by 3.3%, with analysts lowering their price targets post-release.

Verizon’s Q3 earnings saw a 1.5% revenue growth and a 2-cent beat on adjusted EPS. The company continued to lose phone subscribers but improved broadband adds. New CEO Dan Schulman acknowledged the company falling short of its potential and is eyeing convergence through the pending acquisition of Frontier Communications Parent to drive growth. Shares gained 2.3% post-release.

Read more at Nasdaq: Q3 Telecom Wars: How AT&T, TMUS and VZ Stack Up After the Results