VeriSign's AI tailwind meets two contract renewal risks by 2030.
AI tools are lowering the barrier to website creation, driving a 3.7 percent year-over-year increase in VeriSign's domain base in the first quarter of 2026 — a near-term tailwind for the company that operates the exclusive registry for all .com and .net addresses. But the same technology that is boosting registration growth today could erode the value of web addresses over time, and two government contract renewals due by 2030 are keeping investors on the sidelines.
"AI-powered tools are helping more people create websites, which is driving registration growth after a period of stagnation," VeriSign management said on the company's Q1 2026 earnings call. Domain Name System traffic on its network has roughly tripled over the past three years, reflecting the surge in new sites.
The company generated $1.1 billion in free cash flow on $1.7 billion in revenue last year, a 65 percent margin that reflects the capital-light nature of its monopoly. VeriSign's exclusive Cooperative Agreement with ICANN and the US Department of Commerce gives it pricing power and near-zero marginal cost per domain — a tollbooth model that has historically rewarded long-term holders. Yet the stock trades at roughly 27 times forward earnings and has underperformed the broader market by about 30 percent over the past 12 months.
The AI paradox: near-term boost, long-term risk
For now, AI is a net positive. New tools from companies such as OpenAI, Google and Microsoft are making it easier for non-technical users to build websites, reversing a period of stagnant domain growth. VeriSign's domain base expansion to 3.7 percent YoY in Q1 follows years of flattish trends, and management expects the trend to continue as AI lowers the technical barrier to entry.
The longer-term risk is structural. If users increasingly interact with the internet through AI agents that browse, search and transact on their behalf, the .com address itself could become less relevant as a discovery mechanism. VeriSign's counterargument — that AI agents will still need trusted identifiers to verify content — has yet to be tested at scale. The outcome will determine whether the company's registry business faces a gradual decline or remains essential internet infrastructure.
Two contract deadlines hang over the stock
Compounding the AI uncertainty is the renewal of VeriSign's .net and .com Cooperative Agreements, which expire in 2029 and 2030 respectively. While the company holds a presumptive right of renewal and has successfully navigated the process for decades, the terms — particularly around pricing — remain subject to negotiation.
The US Department of Commerce and ICANN have historically allowed VeriSign to raise prices under a regulated framework, but any shift in policy could compress margins. The company's ability to increase registry fees has been a key driver of its free cash flow generation, and investors are pricing in the status quo at 27 times earnings. A less favorable outcome — such as caps on price increases or the introduction of competition — would reset the valuation floor.
For a business with mid-single-digit revenue growth, the current multiple leaves little room for error. The marginal buyer of the stock is likely to stay on the sidelines until the contract terms are clearer, which means the overhang could persist for years. The next major catalyst is unlikely before late 2028, when negotiations for the .net renewal are expected to intensify.
VeriSign remains a high-quality business with a regulatory moat that has held for decades. But the combination of a structural technology shift and two contract deadlines means the stock's risk-reward profile is unusually binary for a company of this caliber. Investors will have a much better read on AI's impact on web navigation well before the 2029 deadline arrives.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.