A major factor behind GE Aerospace’s growth has been the ongoing strain within the global aircraft production system and defense demand.

  • GE Aerospace formed a “Golden Cross,” with its 50-day moving average rising above its 200-day moving average.
  • A similar pattern in late 2022 was followed by a strong rally. 
  • GE’s demand has benefited from military contracts and airlines keeping older aircraft in service longer.

GE Aerospace (GE) stock is gaining momentum, rising for the past four straight sessions and forming a “Golden Cross” pattern after four years, as demand across commercial aviation and defense markets remains strong.

Add Asianet Newsable as a Preferred SourcegooglePreferred

GE stock has gained roughly 14% since the start of the year and reached a record high of $352.8 on Tuesday. Shares were up about 0.2% in early premarket trading on Wednesday.

GE Forms Golden Cross

GE Aerospace stock has triggered a closely watched technical milestone, with its 50-day moving average climbing above its 200-day moving average in a pattern traders call a “Golden Cross.” 

The signal comes as the aerospace manufacturer continues to post record share prices following its transformation into a standalone, aviation-focused business after shedding other legacy operations.

Investors are paying attention because the last occurrence of the same setup, in late 2022, was followed by a powerful advance in the stock over the following months. 

GE’s Financial Results Reinforce Momentum

GE Aerospace reported strong first-quarter results in April, with revenue rising 25% year-on-year to $12.4 billion and orders increasing 87% to $23 billion, indicating strong demand across both its commercial aviation and defense businesses.

The company continues to benefit from the expansion of military programs, supported by propulsion and avionics contracts tied to U.S. defense initiatives. At the same time, airlines worldwide are keeping aircraft in service longer due to production bottlenecks at major manufacturers, thereby creating sustained demand for engine maintenance, repairs, and replacement parts.

Also, the company’s $1 billion investment program to expand manufacturing capabilities in the U.S. has bolstered confidence in long-term aerospace demand and order backlog.

GE Has Wall Street’s Support 

Last month, analysts at Jefferies maintained their ‘Buy’ rating on GE Aerospace, stating that the company leadership continues to anticipate mid-teen percentage growth in services revenue during 2026, followed by another year of double-digit expansion in 2027.

Seaport Research pointed to strong revenue performance driven by delayed aircraft production schedules and airlines keeping existing fleets in service longer than originally planned.

What GE Retail Traders Are Saying 

On Stocktwits, retail sentiment around the stock improved to ‘bullish’ from ‘neutral’ territory the previous day. The stock saw a 900% increase in message volume over the past month, with watchers remaining flat. 

A user said, “Back to all-time highs. WOW. What a dip buy this was.”

GE stock has gained over 49% in the last 12 months. 

For updates and corrections, email newsroom[at]stocktwits[dot]com.<