NEW YORK, January 3, 2026, 05:51 ET — Market closed.
- GE Aerospace ended Friday up 4.1% at $320.75, closing at a new 52-week high.
- Focus is shifting to GE’s Jan. 22 earnings and 2026 guidance, with investors watching engine deliveries and service demand.
- Next week’s U.S. economic data — capped by the Jan. 9 jobs report — may sway rate expectations that can move industrial stocks.
GE Aerospace shares closed up 4.13% on Friday at $320.75, outperforming aerospace peers and marking a new 52-week high in the first session of 2026. Trading volume was about 4.2 million shares, slightly below its 50-day average, market data showed. MarketWatch
The move matters because GE is heading into its next earnings update with the stock at record levels, leaving less room for disappointment in guidance. The company is scheduled to hold its fourth-quarter 2025 earnings webcast on Jan. 22. GE Aerospace
Friday’s jump came as U.S. equities opened the year by snapping a four-day losing streak, with the Dow up 0.66% and the S&P 500 up 0.19%. Joe Mazzola, head of trading and derivatives strategist at Charles Schwab, said the market is seeing a “buy the dip, sell the rip” mentality. Reuters
GE Aerospace is the jet-engine and systems business that emerged as General Electric completed its breakup, spinning off GE Vernova and GE HealthCare and retaining the GE ticker for the aerospace company. Reuters
Investors typically focus on GE’s engine deliveries and its services business, which generates recurring revenue from maintenance, spare parts and repairs over an engine’s life. That “aftermarket” stream is often viewed as steadier than new-engine sales because airlines must keep aircraft flying even when deliveries slow.
In the near term, traders will also be watching whether the stock holds above the prior peak near $318 after Friday’s breakout, a level technicians often treat as a test of support once it is cleared. A retreat back below that area can trigger short-term profit-taking in momentum names.
Before Monday’s open, attention shifts to a heavy U.S. data calendar next week, including the ISM manufacturing survey on Jan. 5 and the ADP employment report and ISM services data on Jan. 7. The government’s monthly employment report is due Jan. 9. Scotiabank
Those reports matter for GE and other industrials because they can move Treasury yields and expectations for interest rates, which often drive rotations between growth and value — and can change the market’s appetite for richly valued cyclicals.
The Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting is scheduled for Jan. 27–28, keeping rate expectations in focus as markets look beyond the holiday-thinned start to the year. Federal Reserve