Boeing (BA) just had one of its worst days in months, and one major bank thinks the panic created a bargain.
Most of Wall Street zeroed in on a single number: 200. That was the size of the China jet order President Trump unveiled, according to Reuters, and traders had hoped for far more. The stock dropped roughly 7%.
Citi looked at the same selloff and saw a buying window. The firm raised its price target on Boeing to $260 from $256 and kept a Buy rating, telling clients the pullback is a chance to buy a recovery story at a discount, 24/7 Wall St. reports.

Why Citi calls the Boeing selloff a ‘gift’ for patient investors
Citi analyst Jason Gursky refreshed the firm’s aerospace and defense models after the drop and concluded the market overreacted. The $4 target bump is almost a side note. The real message is that the discount in the shares is the opportunity.
Citi’s reasoning, in plain terms:
- The selloff was driven by sentiment around one order, not by a change in Boeing’s fundamentals.
- Aerospace names tend to recover first in a cyclical rebound, with defense following.
- That sequencing puts Boeing’s commercial business at the front of the trade.
Gursky did add a caveat: he does not expect a sharp V-shaped bounce while the Middle East conflict stays unresolved, so this is a buy for investors willing to wait. A price target, for newer readers, is simply where an analyst thinks the stock could trade in 12 months. It is an opinion, not a guarantee.
The Boeing backlog and Q1 numbers most coverage skipped
Here is where the contrarian case gets interesting. Under CEO Kelly Ortberg, Boeing posted a stronger first quarter than the stock reaction suggests.
Q1 2026 revenue reached $22.22 billion, up 14% from a year earlier, with 143 commercial deliveries, the company said in its Q1 earnings release. Earnings beat Wall Street’s consensus by about 70%.
Related: Should Boeing be in the Dow? A look at the struggling stock
The order book is the standout. Boeing closed the quarter with a record total backlog of $695 billion, a multi-year cushion of demand that smooths out short-term order noise.
The balance sheet is healing too. Consolidated debt fell to $47.2 billion from $54.1 billion, and production is steadying: the 737 is running at 42 jets per month, the 787 has stabilized at 8 per month, and supplier Spirit AeroSystems has been folded back into the company.
The buried detail in the China order: an option for 750 jets
Most coverage stopped at “200 jets, disappointing.” But there’s a bigger picture that matters more.
The 200-aircraft order announced May 16 carries an option to expand to as many as 750 planes, Al Jazeera reports, if China is satisfied with the first batch. That reopens a market shut to Boeing for nearly a decade, and Trump indicated a follow-up tranche could come around a planned visit from President Xi in September.
More analyst coverage:
- Veteran analyst resets Apple stock price target for 2026
- JPMorgan pulls no punches on Strait of Hormuz, oil prices
- Bank of America tweaks CoreWeave stock price target for 2026
In other words, the number that spooked the market may be a floor, not a ceiling. Traders priced the disappointment immediately and gave little weight to the upside embedded in the deal. That is the gap Citi is leaning into.
How the Boeing call ripples beyond the aerospace sector
A China order of this size does not stay contained to Boeing.
Trump said the jets would use GE Aerospace (GE) engines, roughly 400 to 450 engines tied to the initial 200 planes alone, Aero News Network reported.
Engine makers, parts suppliers, and metals producers all sit downstream of a recovery, and a larger backlog pulls in financing, leasing, and maintenance revenue across the supply chain. The practical takeaway: a Boeing rebound is rarely a one-stock event.
What still has to go right before Boeing hits $260
Citi’s target is not a sure thing, and the bear case is real. A few things need to go Boeing’s way.
Four signals that would support the bull case
- A free cash flow turn. Boeing burned $1.45 billion in free cash flow last quarter, so the thesis needs that to flip positive.
- Margin repair. Commercial operating margin sat at negative 6% in Q1 and has to climb back toward profitability.
- Clean execution. Quality and production scrutiny continues, and another setback would dent confidence fast.
- The China option converting. The path from 200 to 750 jets has to materialize, not just stay a promise.
Source: Seeking Alpha and 24/7 Wall St.
On the other side, defense is already pulling weight, posting 50% operating earnings growth last quarter.
Where Citi sits versus the rest of Wall Street on Boeing
Citi is constructive but not the most aggressive voice on the stock.
The consensus 12-month target sits around $270, with the analyst mix leaning bullish at 21 Buy against 5 Hold ratings and 1 Sell, per data cited by Investing.com.
With BA trading near $215, below its 52-week high of $254.35, Citi’s $260 target implies meaningful upside if the turnaround holds.
What the Citi Boeing call means for your portfolio
Strip away the noise, and the setup is straightforward. Durable airline demand, a record backlog, a healthier balance sheet, and a reopened China market sit on one side.
Negative free cash flow, thin commercial margins, execution risk, and geopolitical exposure sit on the other.
Citi’s view is that the selloff improved the entry price without breaking the story.
For long-term investors, that argues for measured position sizing rather than going all in on a single analyst note. The recovery looks intact, but it is gradual, and the stock can stay volatile while the China option and cash flow questions resolve.
If you are weighing Boeing, watch the next earnings report for the free cash flow turn and any firm news on the larger China commitment. Those two data points will tell you more than the daily price swings.
None of this is a recommendation to buy or sell. It is the information you need to judge whether Citi’s “gift” framing fits your own risk tolerance and timeline.