I get it. The new world order is supposed to have electric cars and busses eliminating our dependence on oil, solar and clean nuclear is supposed to dominate, and we are all going to have some sort of energy epiphany. The reality of the situation is that, we are not criminals for following the current protocol and the transition will inevitably take much longer than originally expected.
When deciding whether to buy, sell, or hold a stock, investors often rely on analyst recommendations. Media reports about rating changes by these brokerage-firm-employed (or sell-side) analysts often influence a stock's price, but are they really important?
Blue Bird's latest 11% drop makes it a bargain, in my opinion, given that the termination of the pension plan has zero impact on its cash balance and adjusted EBITDA. Blue Bird's Q2 results highlighted its operational excellence as its margins expanded YoY despite selling fewer units and diesel buses representing a majority of its sales mix. The TAM expansion brought by fully acquiring Micro Bird could help Blue Bird maintain its growth trajectory in case school bus replacement activity slows down in the early 2030s.
On May 19, 2026, Blue Bird Corp (BLBD) shares fell 11.1% to a current price of $64.68. This decline comes amid a 52-week trading range of $37.68 to $81.51, high
Investors often turn to recommendations made by Wall Street analysts before making a Buy, Sell, or Hold decision about a stock. While media reports about rating changes by these brokerage-firm employed (or sell-side) analysts often affect a stock's price, do they really matter?
Blue Bird acquired the remaining 50% of Micro Bird for $201.8M, implying 10.7x FY2026 forecast EBITDA, which is below the 12.3x sector median. The FY2026 EBITDA guidance raise of 8.9% is largely inorganic, while the organic raise is only 2.2%. Management has beaten guidance for 14 consecutive quarters, supporting credibility of midterm EBITDA targets.