New Zealand markets open in 3 hours 45 minutes

BA Dec 2026 250.000 call

OPR - OPR Delayed price. Currency in USD
Add to watchlist
21.450.00 (0.00%)
As of 09:47AM EDT. Market open.
Full screen
Previous close21.45
Open21.45
Bid18.40
Ask23.90
Strike250.00
Expiry date2026-12-18
Day's range21.45 - 21.45
Contract rangeN/A
Volume1
Open interest188
  • Yahoo Finance Video

    US GDP, retail earnings, C3.ai CEO talks demand: Morning Brief

    Stocks (^DJI, ^IXIC, ^GSPC) are on the path to open the Thursday session amidst Wall Street's outlook on the Federal Reserve's monetary policy and slowing growth in US GDP (Gross Domestic Product). CFRA Research Chief Investment Strategist Sam Stovall sits down with Morning Brief Hosts Seana Smith and Brad Smith, diving into whether interest rates matter more to markets than Friday's Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) print. Loop Capital Markets Managing Director Anthony Chukumba weighs in on the state of the US consumer by analyzing retail earnings out from discount store Dollar General (DG) and electronics outlet Best Buy (BBY). Other top stocks trending on recent earnings results include Salesforce (CRM), Foot Locker (FL), Kohl's (KSS), and Okta (OKTA). C3.ai (AI) Founder, Chairman and CEO Tom Siebel also joins the show to discuss the artificial intelligence developer's fiscal fourth-quarter earnings and the use cases pushing AI demand. This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

  • Yahoo Finance Video

    Boeing set to report plans to address safety, quality issues

    Boeing (BA) is due to submit a report today to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) outlining its plans for handling safety and quality issues. Yahoo Finance's Alexis Keenan reports more on the story and its implications for the airplane manufacturer's future. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief. This post was written by Melanie Riehl

  • Reuters

    Exclusive-To help Airbus, Macron pressed Canada to ease Russia titanium sanctions

    French President Emmanuel Macron personally intervened to persuade Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to give Airbus and other aerospace firms relief from sanctions on Russian titanium, according to three people familiar with the matter. The sensitive request was made during a phone call between the two leaders in March, weeks after Canada broke ranks with allies and slapped sanctions on the strategic metal, alarming France-based Airbus and others that still rely on Russian supplies in plants located in Canada or elsewhere. A Canadian source familiar with the matter said Macron raised the topic in a call with Trudeau on March 29 in the run-up to a visit by French premier Gabriel Attal, who also addressed the issue when he was in Canada.