New York, June 2, 2026, 13:05 (EDT)
- Liberty Broadband Class C dropped 0.9% to $33.13 at midday in U.S. trading.
- The stock is near the value of Charter’s all-stock offer, which is now around $33.38 per share.
- Liberty Broadband’s most recent press release is a preferred-stock dividend notice from May 15.
Liberty Broadband Corp Class C shares slid midday Tuesday. The stock tracked Charter Communications as traders continued to price Liberty Broadband off Charter’s all-stock deal terms instead of any new update from the company.
Nasdaq: The Class C shares slipped 0.9% to $33.13. Liberty Broadband’s Class A stock dropped 0.8% to $33.09. Charter, its major holding and the expected buyer, lost 0.8% at $141.46.
Liberty Broadband is now basically trading as a Charter deal spread — the difference between Liberty’s share price and what investors would get if the deal goes through. The merger terms give Liberty holders 0.236 Charter shares for each Liberty share, valuing Liberty stock at about $33.38 based on Charter’s current price. That’s a spread of less than 1% to Liberty’s Class C shares.
No fresh releases appeared on Liberty Broadband’s press page in the last two days. The last update there, from May 15, reported the board declared a $0.43750001 per share quarterly cash dividend on its Series A cumulative redeemable preferred stock, which is a senior share class with a set dividend.
Liberty Broadband in its latest quarterly filing said it now treats its Charter stake as an equity-method investment, so it reports the holding as an investment instead of folding Charter’s numbers into its own. As of March 31, Liberty had a 33.1% economic interest in Charter, with the stake valued at around $8.8 billion at that time.
Charter said in 2024 it would acquire Liberty Broadband through an all-stock deal, paying Liberty shareholders in Charter shares instead of cash. Liberty Broadband Chairman John Malone called the deal one that would “rationalize Liberty Broadband’s trading discount” and give investors “enhanced liquidity.” Charter CEO Chris Winfrey cited the “strategic partnership since 2013.” Charter Communications
Liberty Broadband said last year it moved up its sale to Charter, timing it to close alongside Charter’s combination with Cox Communications. The terms of the Liberty-Charter deal didn’t change.
Charter and Cox are putting a $34.5 billion price on their deal. When it closes and the Liberty Broadband merger is factored in, Cox Enterprises would end up with around 23% of the new company, fully diluted. Charter said Liberty Broadband holders will get direct stakes in Charter after that transaction wraps.
Peer moves were mild. Comcast dropped 0.5%, less than the slide in Charter. For Liberty Broadband, Charter is still the key comp since Liberty’s deal value moves with Charter’s stock.
The spread isn’t locked in. It can get wider, and that comes with more risk than just Charter dropping. Possible trouble includes delays, missed closing conditions, lawsuits, extra deal costs, or even a regulatory snag for the bigger Charter-Cox deal. Charter and Liberty Broadband both warned investors about these risks in their filings. The fixed exchange ratio leaves Liberty holders exposed if Charter slides before the deal closes.