AAR Corp. provides various products & services to the aviation & defense industries world wide. Its principal customers are The Boeing Co. and Airbus. It has 2 business segments: Aviation Services and Expeditionary Services. The Aviation Services unit provides aftermarket support & services for the commercial aviation, and government & defense markets. It sells & leases various new, overhauled and repaired engine & airframe parts & components, and aircraft to commercial aviation and government/defense customers. It provides inventory management & distribution services, overhaul, repair and engineering services. The Expeditionary Services segment includes airlift & mobility activities. This division provides products and services for the movement of equipment and personnel by the U.S. Department of Defense, foreign governments/ non-governmental organizations. This unit also designs manufactures and installs in-plane cargo loading and handling systems for commercial aircraft, military aircraft and helicopters....
+See MoreSharpe-Lintner-Black CAPM alpha (Premium Members Only) Fama-French (1993) 3-factor alpha (Premium Members Only) Fama-French-Carhart 4-factor alpha (Premium Members Only) Fama-French (2015) 5-factor alpha (Premium Members Only) Fama-French-Carhart 6-factor alpha (Premium Members Only) Dynamic conditional 6-factor alpha (Premium Members Only) Last update: Saturday 4 July 2026
2022-10-25 11:31:00 Tuesday ET

Corporate investment insights from mergers and acquisitions Relative market misvaluation between the bidder and target firms drives most waves of mergers
2019-01-21 10:37:00 Monday ET

Andy Yeh Alpha (AYA) AYA Analytica financial health memo (FHM) podcast channel on YouTube January 2019 In this podcast, we discuss several topical issues
2019-03-11 10:32:00 Monday ET

Lyft seeks to go public with a dual-class stock ownership structure that allows the co-founders to retain significant influence over the rideshare tech unic
2018-03-25 08:39:00 Sunday ET

President Trump imposes punitive tariffs on $60 billion Chinese imports in a brand-new trade war as China hits back with retaliatory tariffs on $3 billion U
2019-04-29 08:35:00 Monday ET

IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath predicts no global recession with key downside risks at this delicate moment. First, trade tensions remain one of the key
2027-01-31 12:25:00 Sunday ET

In recent decades, many governments have chosen to run high fiscal deficits on top of sovereign debt mountains so that greater government intervention still