VeriSign, Inc. (VRSN), headquartered in Reston, Virginia, provides domain name registry services and internet infrastructure that enable navigation of various recognized domain names. Valued at $22.5 billion by market cap, it is a critical infrastructure provider that operates and protects the authoritative domain name registries for .com and .net, making it central to global internet stability.
Companies worth $10 billion or more are generally described as “large-cap stocks,” and VRSN perfectly fits that description, with its market cap exceeding this mark, underscoring its size, influence, and dominance within the software infrastructure industry. The company generates highly recurring, high-margin revenue through domain registration and renewal fees, supported by long-term agreements with ICANN. Its business model is characterized by predictable cash flow, limited competitive exposure, and ongoing investment in cybersecurity and DNS resilience.
Despite being one of the most resilient names in internet infrastructure, VRSN shares slipped 21.4% from their 52-week high of $310.60, achieved on Jul. 28. Over the past three months, VRSN stock has dropped 15.6%, underperforming the SPDR S&P Software & Services ETF’s (XSW) marginal rise during the same time frame.
Yet the longer horizon tells a very different story. Year to date, VRSN is up 17.9%, and over the past 52 weeks it has gained 22%, outperforming XSW’s 3.6% YTD rise and its 2.3% decline over the same 12-month period.
However, the stock has been trading under its 50-day and 200-day moving averages since October, reinforcing a downtrend.
VeriSign delivered a stronger-than-expected third quarter on October 23, posting 7.3% year-over-year revenue growth to $419.1 million, slightly above the Street’s $416.8 million estimate. The company closed the quarter with 171.9 million .com and .net domain registrations, a net addition of 1.45 million names. EPS came in at $2.27, up 9.7% from a year earlier and ahead of analysts’ $2.24 forecast. Deferred revenue reached $1.38 billion, an $80 million increase compared to the same-quarter last year, underscoring continued demand and strong renewal momentum.
















