NYSE • USD • INDUSTRIALS • AEROSPACE & DEFENSE
Current price is 57.4% of 52-week range
Last updated 7 days ago
Boeing remains one of two global large commercial aircraft OEMs, with an installed base and services footprint that create high switching costs and long-duration demand visibility. The December 2025 integration of Spirit AeroSystems meaningfully improves control over 737/787 quality and production stability, but also concentrates execution risk in-house. In defense, incremental awards like the April 2026 $324M CH-47F Block II contract support resilience while commercial recovers.
Financially, results are improving but still not “clean.” In Q1 2026 Boeing reported revenue of $22.2B with a core loss per share of ($0.20) (GAAP loss per share of ($0.11)), and operating cash flow was a $0.2B use; total debt fell to $47.2B at March 31, 2026 (from $54.1B at year-end 2025). Valuation looks optically demanding (widely quoted trailing P/E near ~90), so the stock is effectively priced on a multi-year margin and cash flow normalization rather than current earnings power.
Thesis for the next 12 months is a “show-me” turnaround: if Boeing can lift delivery quality and cadence while holding rework and supplier disruption down, operating leverage can drive a sharp cash inflection. Key catalysts are sustained 737 output/FAA oversight normalization, higher delivery volumes (especially 737/787), and evidence Spirit integration is reducing defects rather than adding friction. Key risks are renewed quality findings that constrain deliveries, integration cost overruns, and cash flow under-delivery versus expectations.
Recommendation: HOLD. Upside depends on execution-driven cash flow recovery, but today’s valuation leaves limited room for new production or quality setbacks while the company is still reporting losses and negative near-term cash generation.