GE Aerospace (NYSE:GE | GE Price Prediction) is having a moment. The stock is up 16.95% year to date through July 10, 2026, orders nearly doubled last quarter, and every aviation Twitter thread seems to end with someone kicking themselves for not buying it at $250. Maybe that someone is you.
Relax. You didn’t miss anything.
Over the exact same stretch, the Industrial Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEARCA:XLI), a plain-vanilla industrials ETF, actually edged GE. XLI returned 17.89% from December 31, 2025 through July 10, 2026. Same window, better number, no need to stare at one ticker every morning.
Same Window, Same Story
From the last trading day of 2025 through July 10, 2026, GE Aerospace climbed 16.95%. XLI climbed 17.89%. The fund quietly finished a nose ahead of the stock.
A hypothetical $10,000 in XLI on New Year’s Eve turned into roughly $11,789 by the second week of July. No earnings-day white knuckles. No obsessive checking of the ex-dividend calendar. Just a broad basket of industrial companies doing what they do.
The Rising Tide Under Both
Here is the part that matters. GE Aerospace did not sprint on its own. It is riding a full-blown commercial aerospace supercycle, defense budgets are expanding, and the wider industrial complex is in the middle of a capex, reshoring, and aftermarket-services boom. Aging engine fleets need MRO work, LEAP deliveries are hitting records, and widebody renewals are stacking up backlogs.
That is an industrials story at its core. The company happens to be one of the biggest and cleanest expressions of it, which is why revenue jumped 24.7% year over year last quarter and orders grew 87%. CEO Larry Culp put it plainly on the April call: “GE Aerospace had a strong first quarter with orders growing 87% and revenue up 29% supporting double-digit growth in earnings and free cash flow.”
XLI, for its part, tracks the Industrial Select Sector Index, a basket of roughly 70 industrial names pulled from the S&P 500. Aerospace and defense, machinery, railroads, logistics, building products. When the tide behind GE lifts, this fund floats with it, because the tide is the sector.
The Real Trade-Off
Yes, in some parallel window, GE could have run away from the pack. Individual stocks do that. GE’s one-year return of 42.97% smokes XLI’s 22.23% over the trailing 12 months. Single names can and do stretch further than the sector.
They can also collapse. Boeing spent years reminding investors what an aerospace “sure thing” looks like when the wheels come off. A safety issue, a labor strike, a botched delivery target, and a stock that everyone was piling into becomes the one everyone is trying to explain away. Concentration cuts both ways, and it cuts hard on the way down.
XLI spreads that risk across roughly 70 holdings for a 0.08% expense ratio, which is about as cheap as diversification gets. You gave up the chance to brag about picking GE at $250. You also gave up the chance to explain to your spouse why you put the college fund in one aerospace ticker.
Process Beats Prediction
The FOMO framing is that hot stocks are a puzzle you were supposed to solve. The reality is that the puzzle solves itself if you own the theme. GE is trading around 44 times earnings with a forward multiple of 48, and it is a great business, but you did not have to hand pick it to participate in what its industry is doing right now.
Chasing tickers is stock picking with extra regret attached. Owning the sector is what most of us actually signed up for when we said we “believe in industrials.” Next time a name goes vertical on your feed, before you feel the pang, check what the sector fund did. You may find you were already there.
Process over prediction. Every time.
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