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The Boeing Company (BA)

NYSE - NYSE Delayed price. Currency in USD
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179.79+0.94 (+0.53%)
At close: 04:00PM EDT
179.85 +0.06 (+0.03%)
After hours: 07:59PM EDT
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Trade prices are not sourced from all markets
Previous close178.85
Open179.59
Bid0.00 x 1000
Ask0.00 x 1200
Day's range177.90 - 180.49
52-week range159.70 - 267.54
Volume5,416,263
Avg. volume7,832,451
Market cap110.37B
Beta (5Y monthly)1.53
PE ratio (TTM)N/A
EPS (TTM)N/A
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-dividend date13 Feb 2020
1y target estN/A
  • Associated Press Finance

    Commercial jet maker Airbus is staying humble even as Boeing flounders. There's a reason for that

    In the latest round of their decades-long battle for dominance in commercial aircraft, Europe’s Airbus established a clear sales lead over Boeing even before the American company encountered more fallout from manufacturing problems and ongoing safety concerns. Airbus has outpaced Boeing for five straight years in plane orders and deliveries, and just reported a 28% quarterly increase in net profit. It was already winning market share by beating Boeing to develop a line of fuel-efficient, mid-sized aircraft that are cheaper for airlines to fly.

  • Reuters

    Former Boeing CEO and Seattle Mariners co-owner Frank Shrontz dies aged 92

    Frank Anderson Shrontz, the former chief executive officer and chairman of planemaker Boeing and part owner of the Seattle Mariners baseball team, has died, the Mariners said in a statement on Saturday. Shrontz joined Boeing in 1958 before taking a hiatus and then rejoined the company to later become its chief executive officer for a decade. Shrontz served in the Department of Defense in the Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford administrations during his brief tenure outside company, including as assistant secretary of the Air Force, before rejoining the planemaker in 1977, according to a biography on Boeing's website.

  • Associated Press Finance

    Boeing locks out its private firefighters around Seattle over pay dispute

    Boeing has locked out its private force of firefighters who protect its aircraft-manufacturing plants in the Seattle area and brought in replacements after the latest round of negotiations with the firefighters' union failed to deliver an agreement on wages. The company said Saturday that it locked out about 125 firefighters and a facility about 170 miles (275 kilometers) away in central Washington. The firefighters serve as first responders to fires and medical emergencies and can call in help from local fire departments.