Putin just spat in Donald Trump’s face…
Only hours after President Trump sat down with Ukrainian president Zelensky to discuss peace talks between the two countries, it was revealed that Russia launched a wave of missile and drone attacks on central Ukraine.
While the mainstream media pundits will no doubt be lining up to hear Trump’s response…
They don’t know what I know.
That Donald Trump is far too busy handling America’s National Emergency to worry about Putin.
Our national emergency is not a war – not officially – not yet. That’s why you won’t hear a word about it on CNN or Fox News.
But Washington is invoking emergency powers… issuing executive orders… and funneling trillions into a rapid economic mobilization.
Billions of lives will be impacted by what’s to come.
To discover what’s really going on – and the moves you need to make now to protect yourself – watch this free exposé now.
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 between bullish and bearish cycles. This holds true for broad indexes such as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100, as well as for individual stocks. In the aerospace sector, one name has lingered on the bearish side far too long and now appears ripe for a sustained bullish phase.
Having broken out of its tight $180 per share range, Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) has entered a long-term uptrend fueled not only by renewed sentiment but also by improving fundamentals. The company has weathered a series of negative headlines and safety incidents that once made it look like a toxic asset—but today, everyone seems eager to own Boeing.
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Whether driven by recent global trade deals or sustained U.S. transportation and defense spending, investors face a key question: Is it too late to join Boeing's rally, or does further upside remain? The answer leans toward the latter for several reasons.
Boeing's Earnings Still Have More to Give
Despite a 14.3% quarterly rally that defied skeptics, Boeing shares still have room to run, even as they trade near 52-week highs. That's precisely the type of price action institutional momentum buyers favor — provided there's a solid financial rationale behind it.
In its latest quarter, Boeing posted a net loss of $1.24 per share, missing the consensus loss of $0.92. Yet investors largely shrugged off the shortfall, recognizing that markets are forward-looking and that a single quarter's headline miss may not fully capture Boeing's trajectory.
Wall Street analysts now project Boeing will swing to $0.53 in earnings per share by Q1 2026—a sharp reversal from current losses. That anticipated momentum could justify a breakout from its recent range. But a crucial question remains: has the stock fully priced in that growth?
To answer that, consider Boeing's price-to-earnings-growth (PEG) ratio. A PEG below 1.0 suggests unpriced growth, and at just 0.5x, Boeing's shares imply only half of the projected EPS expansion is reflected in today's market price.
The Market Likes Boeing's Setup
Recognizing that valuation edge, institutional investors moved swiftly: they added about $2.8 billion of Boeing shares in the latest quarter, according to SEC filings.
Analysts have taken note as well. The consensus rating on Boeing is a Moderate Buy with a $228.90 price target (implying a 2.7% downside), but several firms see greater upside. For example, UBS's Gavin Parsons rates Boeing a Buy with a $280 target, suggesting roughly 20% upside and fresh 52-week highs. That view aligns with recent upgrades from RBC and Bank of America.
Part of this renewed optimism stems from fresh orders from major carriers—most notably Cathay Pacific's recent commitment for 14 Boeing 777-9 jets—signaling confidence in Boeing's manufacturing improvements. These new commercial and defense contracts could accelerate revenue growth, making those bullish EPS forecasts more attainable and bolstering Boeing's case as an overdue winner in the aerospace sector.
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