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GE Aerospace Faces a Prove-It Moment in Q2 Earnings

Close-up of a GE jet engine turbine with the General Electric logo mounted on an aircraft wing.

Key Points

  • GE Aerospace shares fell about 5% after Q2 2026 earnings despite strong revenue and EPS beats, as investors focused on the stock's roughly 46x forward earnings valuation.
  • The company raised its full-year 2026 guidance across revenue, adjusted EPS, operating profit, and free cash flow, citing robust demand from aging airline fleets and defense customers.
  • GE's backlog exceeded $210 billion, and strong free cash flow growth funded $2 billion in buybacks, supporting analyst price target increases and a consensus target of $365.61.
  • MarketBeat previews top five stocks to own in August.

GE Aerospace NYSE: GE is telling investors a familiar story after its Q2 2026 earnings report on July 16. The stock dropped about 5% in early trading the day after the release, despite strong top and bottom-line beats. The company also raised its full-year guidance.

GE Aerospace Today

GE Aerospace stock logo
GEGE 90-day performance
GE Aerospace
$348.58 +2.85 (+0.82%)
As of 03:59 PM Eastern
This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more.
52-Week Range
$254.66
$382.97
Dividend Yield
0.54%
P/E Ratio
42.93
Price Target
$370.33

That pattern of a strong earnings report followed by a stock price decline has been the case for the last two earnings reports.

The reason is a familiar one—valuation. GE trades at around 46x forward earnings, which is a premium to the S&P 500.

It’s also expensive compared to its historical average. But that needs some context, because GE Aerospace has only existed since 2024, when General Electric spun off its energy and healthcare businesses into GE Vernova NYSE: GEV and GE Healthcare Technologies NASDAQ: GEHC, respectively.

That means the “what have you done for me lately?” sentiment impatiently expressed by many investors may actually be an apt way of analyzing GE.

Aging Fleets Are Driving Growth

The headline earnings numbers were impressive. Revenue of $12.63 billion beat estimates for $11.87 billion and was over 21% higher year over year (YOY). Earnings per share (EPS) of $2.02 beat the forecasted $1.86 and was also 21% higher YOY. Orders were up 17%, and free cash flow (FCF) was up a whopping 43%.

Those numbers looked even stronger over the first half of 2026. Orders grew 49% YOY to $39.5 billion. Adjusted revenue for the half rose 27%, and FCF climbed 31% to $4.7 billion.

As impressive as the headline numbers were, there’s a reason that GE Aerospace was willing to raise its full-year revenue and earnings outlook. The company is getting high demand from its airline customers who need to maintain aging fleets.

Management’s commentary provided more specifics. Commercial services revenue grew 32% in the first half, and total engine deliveries rose 31%. GE credited its internal "FLIGHT DECK" lean operating program for cutting shop turnaround times by roughly a week since the end of 2025. That helped drive record internal shop visit output during the quarter.

Defense demand added a second growth engine. GE's Defense & Propulsion Technologies segment posted a 1.55x book-to-bill ratio for the first half, meaning new orders outpaced revenue by 55%. Revenue in that segment grew 17% for the half, with strong contributions from Avio Aero.

Backlog Still the Real Story

Making the results even stronger is the company’s reported backlog of over $210 billion. That backlog gives GE unusual visibility into future revenue, since engine orders typically convert into decades of service revenue once delivered. New wins in the quarter included Copa Airlines selecting up to 120 LEAP-1B engines and a U.S. Air Force contract for an autonomous collaborative platform design review.

The Guidance Raise Was Sweeping

The expectation of continued strong demand was a catalyst for GE to raise its full-year 2026 guidance for revenue, earnings, operating profit, and FCF.

GE didn't just nudge its 2026 outlook higher. It raised guidance across every major line item. Adjusted EPS guidance moved to $7.65–$7.85, up from a prior $7.10–$7.40 range. At the low end, that's a 20% increase from the company's full-year adjusted EPS in 2025.

Operating profit guidance climbed to $10.55–$10.75 billion, versus a prior $9.85–$10.25 billion. Free cash flow guidance rose to $8.9–$9.2 billion, and revenue growth guidance moved from "low double digits" to "high-teens." Management credited robust services demand and equipment deliveries for the upgrade.

Is GE Overvalued?

At around 46x forward earnings, GE is trading at a premium to the S&P 500 and its own historical average. However, the company’s free cash flow (FCF) grew by more than 40% year over year in the quarter.

That cash generation is showing up in shareholder returns, too. GE repurchased $2 billion of stock in the second quarter alone, and diluted share count fell by 24 million shares year over year. The company also ended the quarter with $9.3 billion in cash, or $10.3 billion including short-term investments.

Skeptics will note that kind of FCF growth may not be sustainable, but it’s important to remember that the current iteration of the company has only been in existence since 2024. That means the five-year valuation models, whether FCF or EPS, are factoring in business units that no longer exist for GE Aerospace.

It’s possible that GE falls back a little more, but there’s likely to be a floor above a rising 50-day simple moving average. That means any dip may be short-lived, which is supported by analyst sentiment. The consensus price target for GE is $365.61, and since July, several analysts have raised their targets, with Jefferies offering the highest at $455.

GE chart showing the stock's fall to the 50-day SMA, with annotation identifying that level as near-term support.

Free cash flow also indicates that the dividend is safe and will likely grow again. Right now, that dividend is more of an afterthought, but it’s not an insignificant reason to make the stock a core holding.

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Chris Markoch
About The Author

Chris Markoch

Associate Editor & Contributing Author

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Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
GE Aerospace (GE)
4.4369 of 5 stars
$348.580.8%0.54%42.93Moderate Buy$370.33
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