Today: 10 June 2026
Boeing stock price rises as exec cites 40% drop in supply-chain fixes
12 February 2026
2 mins read

Boeing stock price rises as exec cites 40% drop in supply-chain fixes

New York, Feb 12, 2026, 15:48 EST — Regular session.

  • Boeing shares picked up roughly 2% in afternoon trading, following new remarks on supply-chain quality.
  • Boeing outpaced Airbus in both deliveries and orders for January, with investors zeroing in on the higher-margin handovers that drive cash flow.
  • The next hurdle for the rally? Investors are zeroed in on 737 MAX production plans—and whether Boeing’s new Everett line can keep up.

Boeing (BA) climbed 1.8% to $240.49 during Thursday’s afternoon session, with investors reacting to fresh statements regarding fewer supply-chain issues. Shares swung from $236.07 up to $245.64, and volume reached roughly 5.2 million as of 3:36 p.m. EST.

Investors keep circling the same issue: will Boeing actually convert its busy order book into consistent deliveries, and do it without the production stumbles that have dogged it before? The stakes are real this year—delivery speed, not guidance, is what’s driving cash and shaping the debt picture.

Boeing reported this week it handed over 46 jets in January—38 of them 737 MAX models and five 787 Dreamliners. Net new orders, after cancellations, landed at 103 for the month. Among the headline deals: Aviation Capital Group signed up for 50 of the 737 MAX, and Delta Air Lines added 30 fresh 787s to its pipeline. Rival Airbus, meanwhile, delivered 19 aircraft and counted 49 net orders. Deliveries matter; that’s when the bulk of the cash actually comes in for the manufacturers.

Boeing is spending 40% less time dealing with supply chain fixes than it did in 2024, according to Ihssane Mounir, the company’s senior vice president for global supply chain and fabrication. Speaking to suppliers outside Seattle, Mounir also pointed to a 60% drop in defects from Spirit AeroSystems after Boeing stepped up inspections. Spirit, which made and installed the 737 MAX door plug that blew out on an Alaska Airlines flight this year, has been under a microscope since the FAA slapped production limits on Boeing. The company’s December move to reacquire Spirit, based in Wichita, was, in Mounir’s words, “probably the best thing that’s happened in my career.” Reuters

Boeing isn’t racing to ramp up, but it has a plan. The company’s set to launch a fourth 737 MAX line in Everett, Washington, by mid-summer—the first time that jet leaves Renton for assembly. Output’s edging up, according to Vice President Katie Ringgold: moving from 38 jets a month, aiming for 42 soon, and eventually targeting 63, though “over a number of years.” Two suppliers told Reuters they’d been gearing up for 47 a month this year, but Ringgold now pegs that rate for 2027. Reuters

The stock tends to stumble over these slower ramps. Even a whisper of the build-rate curve leveling off, and the rally can deflate fast.

Airbus still sets the pace in the narrow-body space. Over on the Boeing side, the 737 MAX draws the closest investor scrutiny. More orders are a plus, but the real test is whether jets leave the hangar as scheduled and don’t rack up expensive fixes.

But the risks are right in front of everyone. If there’s another quality lapse, choppy supplier integration, or regulators clamp down harder, Boeing could find itself missing output targets again—and stuck with more inventory than planned.

Eyes have shifted to the upcoming batch of delivery figures, and whether those supplier “fixes” actually take hold on the production floor. The Everett expansion? It’s just another marker, hardly a solution.

Regulators have put forward a proposed airworthiness directive targeting specific Boeing 757-200 and 757-200CB jets, citing possible widespread fatigue damage. The order would mandate inspections or checks of maintenance records, with further action if necessary. Feedback on the proposal is due by March 30, 2026.

Stock Market Today

  • Carvana 5-for-1 Stock Split Sparks Interest Amid Strong Turnaround and EPS Upgrades
    June 9, 2026, 9:15 PM EDT. Carvana (CVNA) recently executed a 5-for-1 stock split, making shares more accessible by lowering the trading price without changing market capitalization. The move follows a 1,500% price surge over three years and reflects management confidence in future growth. Carvana's strategic focus on operational efficiency and its vertically integrated online platform distinguish it in the used car e-commerce space, competing with peers like Cars.com and CarGurus. Analysts have raised earnings per share (EPS) forecasts, with FY26 EPS estimates climbing 23% and FY27 estimates up 16% in two months, highlighting improved investor sentiment. The ongoing demand for used vehicles amid economic stability supports Carvana's growth prospects, potentially enhancing its market share in a fragmented industry.

Latest articles

Nasdaq Sees More Moves After Hours Following U.S. Strike on Iran

Nasdaq Sees More Moves After Hours Following U.S. Strike on Iran

10 June 2026
U.S. stock futures fell after hours and oil rose as U.S. strikes on Iran fueled risk-off sentiment, deepening losses in tech shares and raising investor caution ahead of Wednesday’s key inflation report, with fears of Fed rate hikes and volatility from the upcoming SpaceX IPO adding pressure.
Keel Slides After $458 Million AI Data-Center Debt Deal Launch

Keel Slides After $458 Million AI Data-Center Debt Deal Launch

10 June 2026
Keel Infrastructure shares plunged 4.24% to $5.42 after closing a $458 million convertible debt sale, reviving investor fears of future dilution even as the company boosts funding for AI-focused data-center projects; shares slipped further to $5.32 after hours on more than double average volume, reflecting concerns over execution risks and the impact of new financing.
Super Micro sinks after $7B AI server plan; dilution a risk

Super Micro sinks after $7B AI server plan; dilution a risk

10 June 2026
Super Micro Computer plans to raise $7 billion through equity and equity-linked financing to fund soaring AI server orders, sending shares down about 9% in after-hours trading as investors focused on dilution risk; the company reported $39 billion in recent AI server orders, but noted these are not firm commitments and cited ongoing legal and regulatory risks.
American Airlines Stock Rises on Google Fuel Deal, Market Watches for Fuel Shock

American Airlines Stock Rises on Google Fuel Deal, Market Watches for Fuel Shock

10 June 2026
American Airlines surged to $14.09, up 48.5 cents, after announcing a three-year sustainable aviation fuel deal with Google covering 35 million gallons, as investors focused on surging fuel costs that jumped 78% in April to $6.5 billion; the stock rose in line with airline peers amid a drop in crude prices, while American’s 2026 outlook remains pressured by higher fuel expenses and a narrowed profit forecast.
Nokia Drops 7% After Nvidia 6G Chatter Hits AI Stocks

Nokia Drops 7% After Nvidia 6G Chatter Hits AI Stocks

10 June 2026
Nokia shares plunged 6.99% to 11.970 euros in Helsinki after reports of Nvidia’s push into future mobile-network tech raised fears over Nokia’s AI-driven growth story, with investors questioning whether Nokia can maintain its edge as competition intensifies and its forward P/E more than doubles this year.
QVC Group stock (QVCGA) plunges on creditor-talks report as bankruptcy risk comes into view
Previous Story

QVC Group stock (QVCGA) plunges on creditor-talks report as bankruptcy risk comes into view

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz
Next Story

Stock Market Today 14.02.2026

Go toTop