Just over £2 now, BT’s share price hasn’t caught up with reality yet — so where should it be trading?

BTâs (LSE: BT.A) share price continues to reflect the old story of a slow, utility-like operator. This is despite the business now being deep into a transition that is reshaping its fundamentals.
Peak capex appears to be behind it, and the benefits of its fibre-first strategy are becoming more evident. This means BT is shifting from an investment-heavy phase into one with stronger earnings visibility and improving cash generation.
That gap between improving fundamentals and stagnant valuation leaves BT looking a bargain to me at this stage of its transition.
So, how high can the shares go?
Strong earnings growth ahead
The key driver for any firmâs share price over the long run is sustained growth in earnings (âprofitsâ). A risk for BT is the intense competition in the telecoms sector that may squeeze its margins. However, consensus analystsâ forecasts are that its earnings will grow by 15% a year to end-2028 at minimum.
This looks conservative to me, given its recent run of results. The full-year 2025 numbers showed profit after tax soared 23% year on year to £1.054bn. This highlights how BTâs improving cost base and rising fibre economics are now feeding through more visibly to the bottom line.
Normalised free cash flow jumped 25% to £1.598bn, which is a major driver of longâterm value in its own right. This was driven by higher EBITDA and a materially lower workingâcapital outflow.
Meanwhile, Openreach — BTâs fast-expanding fullâfibre network — delivered 5% EBITDA growth to £4.029bn. This reflected rising Fibre to the Premises penetration and strong cost control.
Indeed, BTâs ongoing cost-cutting and simplification programme will be another important earnings driver ahead. The firm has already delivered £3bn in cost savings â a full year ahead of plan. And it is now targeting a further £3bn of savings by 2029. This will boost EBITDA even in periods when revenue has dipped.
Together, these shifts underline a business whose fundamentals are improving in line with its transition plan.
So what are the shares really worth?
In my experience as a former investment bank trader, discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis is the optimal way to ascertain a shareâs true worth.
It estimates a companyâs âfair valueâ by projecting its future cash flows and then âdiscountingâ them back to today.
Some analystsâ DCF modelling is more bearish than mine, depending on the inputs used. However, based on my DCF assumptions â including an 8.6% discount rate â BT is 51% undervalued at its current £2.06 price.
Therefore, its fair value could secretly be close to £4.20 a share — more than double its price today.
And because asset prices typically gravitate towards their fair value in the long run, it suggests a potentially terrific buying opportunity to consider if the DCF assumptions prove accurate.
My investment view
The old market narrative for BT simply no longer fits the new numbers, in my view.
With the business now moving into a more profitable, cash-generative phase, my valuation work suggests the shares sit well below their intrinsic worth.
On that basis, I will add to my position very soon. And I think BT merits far more attention from value-minded investors than it is currently getting.
The post Just over £2 now, BTâs share price hasnât caught up with reality yet — so where should it be trading? appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
Should you invest £1,000 in BT Group right now?
When investing expert Mark Rogers has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for nearly a decade has provided thousands of paying members with top stock recommendations from the UK and US markets.
And right now, Mark thinks there are 6 standout stocks that investors should consider buying. Want to see if BT Group made the list?
More reading
- See what £15k invested in BT shares just 1 month ago is worth now
- Nearing a 52-week high, are BT shares still a good buy?
- Up 38% in a year, is the BT share price still attractive?
- BT shares: here are the latest growth and dividend forecasts!
- Down 8%, is BTâs share price a serious bargain at around £2?
Simon Watkins has positions in Bt Group Plc. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.
