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Boeing (BA) stock jumps today as $2.7 billion Apache support deal kicks off 2026 trading
2 January 2026
2 mins read

Boeing (BA) stock jumps today as $2.7 billion Apache support deal kicks off 2026 trading

NEW YORK, Jan 2, 2026, 11:27 ET — Regular session

  • Boeing shares rose about 2.7% in late-morning U.S. trade, near a 52-week high.
  • A new $2.7 billion Pentagon contract for Apache helicopter support put Boeing’s defense work back in focus.
  • Investors are also watching next week’s U.S. jobs report for fresh signals on interest rates.

Boeing shares climbed about 2.7% on Friday, buoyed by renewed risk appetite on Wall Street and attention on a fresh U.S. defense award. The stock was last up $5.79 at $222.91 in New York trading.

The move matters because Boeing is entering 2026 still under investor pressure to prove it can translate a large backlog into steadier deliveries and cash. Defense and services contracts can offer longer-dated revenue visibility even when commercial aircraft output is constrained.

Broader markets also helped. “The next Fed Chair is probably going to be much more dovish than Jerome Powell,” said Dennis Dick, chief market strategist at Stock Trader Network; “dovish” is Wall Street shorthand for a tilt toward lower interest rates. Reuters

The Pentagon said the U.S. military awarded Boeing a $2.7 billion contract for post-production support services related to Apache helicopters. Post-production support typically covers maintenance, parts and sustainment after an aircraft is delivered.

The announcement followed a separate $4.7 billion Army contract awarded about a month earlier for new-build Apache AH-64E helicopters and related equipment, Reuters reported. The pair of awards highlights the continuing flow of rotorcraft work into Boeing’s defense portfolio.

Regulatory headlines remain part of the backdrop for aerospace names. An FAA airworthiness directive — a legally enforceable safety instruction — became effective on Jan. 2 for certain Boeing 777 variants, according to a U.S. Department of Transportation summary.

The directive addresses concerns tied to gust-suppression sensor “transorb modules,” components designed to protect against lightning-related electrical surges; regulators warned the issue could, if left unaddressed, raise the risk of flight-control problems. The rule requires checks and potential replacement or testing of affected parts, and restricts installation of affected components. Department of Transportation

Across the commercial market, Boeing’s order-and-delivery race with Airbus remains a key sentiment barometer. Airbus said it will publish audited year-end commercial data on Jan. 12, after recently trimming its 2025 delivery target to “around 790” jets from “around 820” following a fuselage-panel issue. Reuters

Boeing’s stock is trading within about 2% of its 52-week high of $228, after ranging as low as $128.88 over the past year. Traders were watching whether the shares could hold above the $220 area after the early 2026 lift.

The next near-term swing factor is macro. The U.S. jobs report due Jan. 9 is expected to show payrolls rose by 55,000 in December, while the unemployment rate stood at 4.6%, a more than four-year high, according to a Reuters poll cited by Reuters.

Inflation data and the start of fourth-quarter earnings season also loom in January, Reuters reported, with the U.S. consumer price index due Jan. 13 and major bank results starting that week. Rate expectations matter for Boeing because they can shape broader risk appetite and airline financing conditions.

For Boeing investors specifically, the watch list into the next few sessions stays familiar: follow-through on defense awards, any new FAA actions tied to Boeing aircraft, and fresh signals on production stability as the year’s delivery race with Airbus comes back into focus.

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