A Better Way to Trade Apple
Apple ($AAPL) has built a $3.1 trillion empire, but… where does Apple go from here?
While some point to recent volatility as concerning, our advanced A.I. models are painting a different picture for the immediate future.
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Wall Street Bets Boeing Stock Is Making a Comeback
Written by Gabriel Osorio-Mazilli. Published 8/19/2025.
Key Points
- Boeing stock has shown markets that it still has some more ground to cover higher, even with a recent breakout there's more room to rally still.
- The reasoning is that future EPS growth is not yet priced in, especially with recovering fundamental factors.
- Wall Street analysts and institutional buyers have turned bullish on Boeing again.
Market forces often act like a pendulum, swinging from bullish to bearish with each cycle. This dynamic applies to broad indexes such as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100, as well as individual names. In the aerospace sector, one stock has lingered on the bearish side long enough—making it ripe for a renewed bullish phase.
After breaking through its tight $180-per-share range, Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) has entered a longer-term uptrend, fueled by improving sentiment and recovering fundamentals. The company has weathered negative media reports and high-profile incidents that once cast it as a toxic asset. Now, investors are clamoring for exposure.
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Whether driven by evolving global trade deals or the U.S. government's commitments to transportation and defense spending, investors face a choice: Is it too late to join Boeing's momentum, or are more gains still ahead? Evidence suggests the latter.
Boeing's Earnings Still Have More to Give
Boeing shares rallied 14.3% last quarter—defying skeptics and trading near a new 52-week high—the kind of price action institutional momentum buyers covet. Yet they seek a solid financial rationale for chasing higher prices.
In its latest quarterly report, the company posted a net loss of $1.24 per share, wider than analysts' expected $0.92 loss—yet the stock barely wavered. Markets are forward-looking, and this shortfall may not be as alarming as it appears.
By Q1 2026, analysts forecast Boeing to swing into a $0.53 earnings-per-share (EPS) profit—a dramatic turnaround from today's losses. That anticipated rebound could fuel a breakout beyond its current range. But has the stock already priced in that growth? The price-to-earnings-growth (PEG) ratio provides a clue.
With a PEG of just 0.5×, Boeing is trading at half the multiple of its projected earnings growth. Any PEG below 1.0× suggests potential upside remains unpriced.
The Market Likes Boeing's Setup
Smart-money investors recognized this valuation opportunity, driving roughly $2.8 billion in institutional buys last quarter. That surge underscores confidence in Boeing's trajectory.
On Wall Street, the consensus rating is Moderate Buy with a $228.90 price target—implying modest downside. Yet UBS Group's Gavin Parsons calls for a 20% upside to $280 per share (forecast), potentially taking BA to a fresh 52-week high. That call echoes recent upgrades from RBC and Bank of America.
Adding to the bullish case, Boeing has secured fresh jet orders from major global carriers—a vote of confidence after past production setbacks. These deals could pave the way for more commercial and defense contracts, making those optimistic EPS forecasts more attainable.
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