By Doug Busch
Strength in Boeing Company and GE Vernova Inc. following earnings is more than just a company-specific story. It carries broader implications for the market and the industrial sector.
As bellwethers tied to global growth, capital spending, and infrastructure demand, their post-earnings momentum suggests underlying resilience in economically sensitive areas of the market. When names like Boeing and GE Vernova respond well to results, it often signals improving confidence in the industrial cycle, reinforcing a more constructive backdrop for equities overall.
Year to date, the State Street Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF is the third best major S&P 500 group, out of 11. It is higher by 10%, outdone only by energy and materials.
The fund sits 5% off its most recent 52 week high and has formed a cup-with-handle base. The pattern's depth saw a bounce off its 200 day simple moving average on March 30. Both Boeing and GE Vernova are among the top 10 holdings, and other represented groups include rails.
CSX is reacting well after Wednesday's earnings announcement after the bell. But bifurcation exists, with defense stocks being pummeled by the iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF 12% below its 52 week high and down 5% this week.
Let's take a detailed look at the current setups in Boeing and GE Vernova.
Boeing, a global aerospace operator, is higher by 7% year to date and 31% over the last year. The stock is looking for a four-week winning streak, a run that began with a 9% advance the first week of April which completed a bullish morning star.
Looking at the stock's daily chart shows how price memory around the very round $200 number has been influential. The area was supportive last May and June, but undercut the level, recording a bear trap last November and this March. It was quickly recaptured.
This week, it recorded a bearish death cross, but the last time that occurred in December, the price rocketed higher by 50 points. At the start of the month it broke above a short downtrend on the ratio chart against the State Street Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF and the stock set up a double bottom pivot of $232.06. At the base lows, it filled a gap from the Dec. 1 session. Enter here and look for the stock to move toward $300 by year end, a 30% gain from current prices. Remain bullish above $218.
Boeing was trading around $231 Thursday.
GE Verona, a power generation provider and energy infrastructure player, is up an astounding 73% year to date and more than 200% over the last year. Since it started trading two years ago it has never recorded a losing streak longer than three weeks.
Looking at the daily chart one can see how tightly it trades, showing hallmark bullish characteristics. It has recorded a series of positive moves on the ratio chart against the XLI over the last year. The stock broke above a double bottom pivot of $664.79 on Dec. 10.
Notice that the first time it touched the 50 day simple moving average after the breakout, often an optimal entry point, its uptrend quickly resumed.
Round number theory came into play with a bull flag breakout right at the very round $1000 number on Wednesday and is following through nicely early Thursday. Respect that it negated a bearish evening star completed on March 26 (with a doji candle the day prior) in the process. Enter this on a pullback near $1125 and look for a move toward $1450 by year end, a 25% gain from current prices. Remain bullish above $950.
GE Verona was trading around $1140 Thursday.
Doug Busch is the senior technical analyst at Barron's Investor Circle . His technical view is added to stock picks, including those published exclusively for Investor Circle readers. A glossary of technical terms is updated regularly with new entries.
This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 23, 2026 12:10 ET (16:10 GMT)
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