Toronto, June 19, 2026, 17:05 (EDT)
- Bombardier Class B shares jumped 4.41% to close at C$314.87. The S&P/TSX Composite lost 0.3%.
- The rollout of Canada’s aircraft and vessel luxury tax remained in the spotlight, with a report showing the measure generated C$913.4 million before officials decided to cut it.
- Global 8000 program and services growth are still at the heart of the stock story. But Dassault’s Falcon 10X first flight has turned up the competitive heat.
Bombardier Inc. Class B shares jumped Friday as traders piled into the business jet maker’s turnaround and Global 8000 plans. The stock finished at C$314.87 in Toronto, up C$13.30 or 4.41%. That put it just below its 52-week high at C$329.16, even as the Canadian market lagged.
Bombardier isn’t trading as a typical turnaround play now. Google Finance data had the stock just above the average 12-month analyst target of C$314.43. That’s from eight analysts tracked in the last three months—four rate it “buy,” four say “hold.” Google
Policy moved back into focus. The Canadian Press said Friday that Canada’s luxury tax on high-end cars, planes and boats brought in C$913.4 million from fall 2022 through March 2025, before Ottawa pulled it back. According to the Canada Revenue Agency, from Nov. 5, 2025, the tax no longer applies to planes or boats, but cars over the set limit still get taxed.
Bombardier is feeling the impact more than other Canadian industrial names. CEO Éric Martel told Canadian Press last fall the levy stopped more than half a dozen business jet deals. Jacques Roy, professor emeritus at HEC Montréal, said buyers uncertain about the tax could just “postpone” purchases or hang on to their planes longer. Barchart.com
Bombardier put out new product news this week. On June 16, the company said it delivered the first Global 8000 in Africa to BUA Group of Nigeria, highlighting the jet’s Mach 0.95 speed and its 8,000-nautical-mile range. BUA founder Abdul Samad Rabiu said the plane brings “range, speed, comfort, and reliability.” Martel called it “a significant milestone.” Stock Titan
Investors have been watching the stock after numbers that are tough to miss. Bombardier’s first-quarter revenue came in at $1.6 billion, a 5% rise from last year. The company’s services revenue hit $617 million, up 25%. Free cash flow swung to $360 million, and backlog hit $20.3 billion as of March 31.
Orders are still in focus. Bombardier posted a unit book-to-bill ratio of 3.6 times for the quarter. That number, which compares orders booked to deliveries, signals orders running ahead of shipments. Any figure over 1 means orders outpaced deliveries. Bombardier now sees free cash flow topping $1.0 billion in 2026, up from its previous view. The delivery and revenue goals stay unchanged.
Dassault Aviation reported Friday that its Falcon 10X took its first flight, aiming for service in 2027. The long-range jet is Dassault’s move into the same market that Bombardier’s Global 7500 and Global 8000, and Gulfstream’s G700 and G800, now fight for. Competition at this top end is getting tougher.
S&P/TSX Composite Index closed down 111.92 points, or 0.3%, at 34,857.34. Materials dragged after gold fell. Douglas Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, told reporters financial markets are weighing “two nearly equal and offsetting forces” this week—risk in the Middle East and a more hawkish U.S. Fed. Reuters
But the stock doesn’t have much of a safety net. Any hiccup—like a delay with Global 8000 deliveries, softer orders, margin squeeze in services, or new trade tensions—could put quick pressure on a valuation now near the average analyst target. Bombardier jets get an exemption under the Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade deal, but talks of tariffs and certification issues have still weighed on the sector.
Bombardier’s stock tells the story. Investors want proof the company can turn its strong backlog into real cash flow, not just hang on. The next challenge is if Bombardier can keep up deliveries, hold pricing, and grow its services business, all while competitors are stepping up in the long-range, high-margin business jet market.