GD

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GD
$348,43
-$2,96(-0,84%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-08 04:07 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-08 04:07, General Dynamics (GD) is priced at $348,43, with a total market cap of $94,21B, a P/E ratio of 21,58, and a dividend yield of 1,72%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $346,00 and $351,07. The current price is 0,70% above the day's low and 0,75% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 413,34K. Over the past 52 weeks, GD has traded between $337,82 to $364,42, and the current price is -4,38% away from the 52-week high.

GD Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$351,39
Market Cap$94,21B
Volume413,34K
P/E Ratio21,58
Dividend Yield (TTM)1,72%
Dividend Amount$1,59
Diluted EPS (TTM)15,59
Net Income (FY)$4,21B
Revenue (FY)$52,55B
Earnings Date2026-04-22
EPS Estimate3,68
Revenue Estimate$12,65B
Shares Outstanding268,11M
Beta (1Y)0.387
Ex-Dividend Date2026-04-10
Dividend Payment Date2026-05-08

About GD

General Dynamics Corporation operates as an aerospace and defense company worldwide. It operates through four segments: Aerospace, Marine Systems, Combat Systems, and Technologies. The Aerospace segment designs, manufactures, and sells business jets; and offers aircraft maintenance and repair, management, charter, aircraft-on-ground support and completion, staffing, and fixed-base operator services. The Marine Systems segment designs and builds nuclear-powered submarines, surface combatants, and auxiliary ships for the United States Navy and Jones Act ships for commercial customers, as well as builds crude oil and product tankers, and container and cargo ships. This segment also provides navy ships maintenance and modernization services; lifecycle support and repair services for navy surface ships; and program management, planning, engineering, and design support services for submarines and surface ships. The Combat Systems segment manufactures land combat solutions, such as wheeled and tracked combat vehicles, Stryker wheeled combat vehicles, piranha vehicles, weapons systems, munitions, mobile bridge systems with payloads, tactical vehicles, main battle tanks, armored vehicles, and armaments. This segment also offers modernization programs, engineering, support, and sustainment services. The Technologies segment provides information technology solutions and mission support services; mobile communication, computers, and command-and-control mission systems; and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance solutions to military, intelligence, and federal civilian customers. This segment also offers cloud computing, artificial intelligence; machine learning; big data analytics; development, security, and operations; software-defined networks; everything-as-a-service; defense enterprise office system solutions; and unmanned undersea vehicle manufacturing and assembly services. General Dynamics Corporation was founded in 1899 and is headquartered in Reston, Virginia.
SectorIndustrials
IndustryAerospace & Defense
CEOPhebe N. Novakovic
HeadquartersReston,VA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.gd.com
Employees (FY)117,00K
Average Revenue (1Y)$449,14K
Net Income per Employee$35,98K

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General Dynamics (GD) is currently trading at $348,43, with a 24h change of -0,84%. The 52-week trading range is $337,82–$364,42.

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Hot Posts su General Dynamics (GD)

MarketAdvicer

MarketAdvicer

16 ore fa
StrategyBuys4871BTC Strategy, the Nasdaq-listed software and business intelligence company led by executive chairman Michael Saylor, has once again made headlines by purchasing an additional 4,871 Bitcoin for approximately $329.9 million, executing the trades between April 1and April 5, 2026, at an average price of $67,718 per coin. The disclosure came through a Form 8-K filing submitted to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on April 6, 2026, and it confirmed what many market participants had expected following a one-week silence in the company's otherwise relentless accumulation cadence. The purchase brings Strategy's total Bitcoin holdings to 766,970 BTC, acquired across multiple years at a combined cost of approximately $58.02 billion, which works out to an average acquisition price of roughly $75,644 per coin. With Bitcoin currently trading around $68,510, the company is carrying a substantial unrealized loss on its aggregate position. That gap between cost basis and market price is not a footnote — it is a central tension in the Strategy story right now, one that the company itself has acknowledged directly in its most recent financial disclosures. For the first quarter of 2026, Strategy reported a $14.46 billion unrealized loss on its digital asset holdings, accompanied by a $2.42 billion deferred tax benefit. On top of that, the company flagged that it expects to establish an additional $0.5 billion valuation allowance against its deferred tax assets, a consequence of Bitcoin's fair value sitting below the firm's cost basis. These are not trivial numbers. They reflect the financial reality of what it means to hold nearly 767,000 Bitcoin on a corporate balance sheet during a prolonged period of price weakness. And yet the buying continues. To understand why, it is important to revisit the origin and architecture of Strategy's Bitcoin thesis, because this latest purchase did not happen in a vacuum. Saylor first began converting Strategy's treasury into Bitcoin in August 2020, at a time when the company's core software business was stagnating and its cash holdings were being eroded by monetary inflation. The decision was framed not as speculation but as a capital preservation strategy — a bet that Bitcoin, with its fixed supply of 21 million coins and its decentralized, censorship-resistant properties, would outperform cash and traditional treasury instruments over a multi-year horizon. That thesis has since evolved into something far more ambitious. Strategy no longer views itself primarily as a software company with Bitcoin on its balance sheet. It has effectively repositioned itself as a Bitcoin acquisition vehicle, using the capital markets machinery available to a publicly listed company — equity issuances, preferred stock offerings, convertible notes — to continuously raise fresh capital and deploy it into Bitcoin. The software business still exists and still generates revenue, but it has become secondary to the mission of accumulating as much Bitcoin as possible. The funding infrastructure behind these purchases has grown increasingly sophisticated. Alongside the April 6 purchase disclosure, Strategy confirmed it is running two parallel capital raise programs: a $21 billion at-the-market common stock offering under the MSTR ticker, and a $21 billion preferred stock offering under the STRC ticker. The STRC instrument is particularly notable because it is designed to attract fixed-income investors — institutions and individuals who want some form of Bitcoin-linked exposure but prefer the structure and predictability of a preferred security over the full volatility of equity. According to recent disclosures, the STRC channel has grown from near-zero utilization roughly a year ago to representing approximately 8% of Strategy's total capital raise activity. That shift matters because it signals the company is actively broadening its investor base, accessing capital pools that were previously untapped, and building a more resilient funding engine that is less dependent on any single instrument or investor category. This approach to capital raising is itself a kind of financial innovation. Strategy is essentially functioning as a leveraged Bitcoin acquisition platform, using the mechanisms of traditional capital markets to accumulate a scarce asset at scale. The bet embedded in this model is that the long-term appreciation of Bitcoin will exceed the cost of capital required to finance the accumulation, and that shareholders and preferred holders will ultimately be rewarded for their patience and their willingness to absorb near-term volatility and mark-to-market losses. The one-week pause in purchases that preceded this buy is worth examining more closely. During the week ending March 29, Strategy reported no new Bitcoin acquisitions — the first such week in a very long time. It came on the heels of one of the most aggressive single-week purchases in the company's history: 22,337 BTC bought for approximately $1.57 billion in a single week earlier in March. A pause after that kind of outlay is understandable from a capital management perspective. The company had likely deployed a significant portion of its available liquidity and needed time to reload its capacity through fresh equity or STRC issuances before resuming purchases. The return to buying in the first week of April, at $329.9 million, confirms that the reload happened and that the machine is running again. Zooming out to the full first quarter of 2026, the scale of Strategy's accumulation is genuinely staggering. The company purchased 89,316 BTC in Q1 alone, spending approximately $6.3 billion over the course of roughly ninety days. That is an average of nearly1,000 Bitcoin per day, every day, for three months straight. No other corporate entity, no sovereign wealth fund, and no publicly disclosed institutional buyer comes close to matching that pace of accumulation in a single quarter. It is a number that underscores just how dominant Strategy has become as a buyer in the Bitcoin market and how central this accumulation program has become to the company's identity and operations. Michael Saylor, for his part, has been articulating a broader philosophical framework to contextualize this behavior. In public statements made over the weekend before the April 6 filing, he declared that the traditional four-year Bitcoin halving cycle is no longer the primary driver of price action. His argument is that Bitcoin has crossed a threshold of institutional legitimacy from which it will not retreat, and that capital flows — driven by banks, asset managers, and digital credit mechanisms — have replaced retail sentiment and supply shocks as the dominant force shaping Bitcoin's price trajectory. He described Bitcoin as having won, framing it as digital capital that has achieved global consensus as a store of value. He also pointed to governance risk, not technical vulnerability, as the most pressing threat to Bitcoin going forward, warning specifically against attempts to alter the protocol in ways that would undermine its core properties. Whether one finds that framing persuasive or overly promotional, it provides important context for why Strategy continues to buy into weakness. Saylor is not operating on a short time horizon. He is not looking at next quarter's price target or trying to buy at the exact bottom of a cycle. The company's entire posture is premised on the belief that Bitcoin held over a decade or more will compound in value at a rate that justifies the cost of capital required to accumulate it, the unrealized losses incurred along the way, and the concentration risk inherent in putting the vast majority of a company's financial identity into a single asset. The competitive landscape surrounding Strategy's position has shifted meaningfully in recent months, and that shift adds another layer of context to this latest purchase. Several companies that had publicly committed to Bitcoin treasury strategies are now liquidating their holdings. MARA Holdings, one of the largest publicly listed Bitcoin mining companies in the United States, sold over 15,000 BTC in March 2026, raising approximately $1.1 billion and trimming its treasury down to 38,689 BTC. Riot Platforms sold its entire Bitcoin production from March, amounting to 3,778 coins. Genius Group, an AI-focused education company that had positioned itself as a Bitcoin treasury firm, liquidated the last of its 84 BTC holdings to retire debt. Cango Inc. sold4,451 BTC. GD Culture Group authorized the sale of a portion of its 7,500 BTC treasury. These are not isolated events. They represent a broader pattern of corporate Bitcoin holders reducing exposure under financial pressure during a period of sustained price weakness. The contrast with Strategy could not be more stark. While the rest of the corporate Bitcoin ecosystem is shrinking its exposure, Strategy is expanding its own by hundreds of millions of dollars at a time. That divergence is significant not just as a market signal but as a statement about the different financial conditions, risk tolerances, and time horizons that separate Strategy from most of its peers. Financially, the company is in a position where it can sustain this behavior in ways that most others cannot. Its ability to continuously access capital markets through MSTR equity offerings and STRC preferred issuances gives it a funding mechanism that does not depend on its Bitcoin holdings appreciating in the short term. As long as investors — equity and fixed-income alike — remain willing to fund Strategy's purchase program, the company can continue buying regardless of where Bitcoin trades on any given day. That said, the risks embedded in this model are real and should not be glossed over. Strategy is now carrying approximately $58 billion in cost basis across its Bitcoin holdings, and the current market value of that position is several billion dollars below that figure. If Bitcoin were to experience a prolonged and severe downturn, the pressure on Strategy's capital raise capacity would intensify, because investor appetite for MSTR shares and STRC instruments is not entirely independent of Bitcoin's price. A sustained bear market would likely make it more expensive and more difficult for the company to raise fresh capital, which could in turn constrain its ability to maintain the accumulation pace that has defined its recent quarters. The $0.5 billion additional valuation allowance flagged in the Q1 disclosures is a small but real indicator that the financial consequences of prolonged weakness are beginning to accumulate on the balance sheet. None of this appears to be changing the calculus for Saylor and the Strategy team at this moment. The April 6 filing represents the clearest possible statement of intent: the company bought below its own cost basis, in a down market, after being forced by financial mechanics to pause for a week, and it bought at a scale that most institutional participants would consider substantial. The 4,871 BTC added to the treasury pushes the total holding steadily closer to the 800,000 BTC milestone, a psychological threshold the market will be watching carefully in the weeks ahead. At the current pace of accumulation, and assuming Strategy continues to access capital markets at a comparable rate, that threshold is well within reach before the end of 2026. The question that remains — and that the market is actively debating — is whether the conviction driving that accumulation will ultimately be vindicated by Bitcoin's long-term price trajectory, or whether the concentration of risk at this scale will one day demand a reckoning that no amount of preferred stock issuance can fully absorb. For now, Strategy has answered that question the only way it ever does: by buying more.
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Yusfirah

Yusfirah

21 ore fa
#StrategyBuys4871BTC Strategy, the Nasdaq-listed software and business intelligence company led by executive chairman Michael Saylor, has once again made headlines by purchasing an additional 4,871 Bitcoin for approximately $329.9 million, executing the trades between April 1and April 5, 2026, at an average price of $67,718 per coin. The disclosure came through a Form 8-K filing submitted to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on April 6, 2026, and it confirmed what many market participants had expected following a one-week silence in the company's otherwise relentless accumulation cadence. The purchase brings Strategy's total Bitcoin holdings to 766,970 BTC, acquired across multiple years at a combined cost of approximately $58.02 billion, which works out to an average acquisition price of roughly $75,644 per coin. With Bitcoin currently trading around $68,510, the company is carrying a substantial unrealized loss on its aggregate position. That gap between cost basis and market price is not a footnote — it is a central tension in the Strategy story right now, one that the company itself has acknowledged directly in its most recent financial disclosures. For the first quarter of 2026, Strategy reported a $14.46 billion unrealized loss on its digital asset holdings, accompanied by a $2.42 billion deferred tax benefit. On top of that, the company flagged that it expects to establish an additional $0.5 billion valuation allowance against its deferred tax assets, a consequence of Bitcoin's fair value sitting below the firm's cost basis. These are not trivial numbers. They reflect the financial reality of what it means to hold nearly 767,000 Bitcoin on a corporate balance sheet during a prolonged period of price weakness. And yet the buying continues. To understand why, it is important to revisit the origin and architecture of Strategy's Bitcoin thesis, because this latest purchase did not happen in a vacuum. Saylor first began converting Strategy's treasury into Bitcoin in August 2020, at a time when the company's core software business was stagnating and its cash holdings were being eroded by monetary inflation. The decision was framed not as speculation but as a capital preservation strategy — a bet that Bitcoin, with its fixed supply of 21 million coins and its decentralized, censorship-resistant properties, would outperform cash and traditional treasury instruments over a multi-year horizon. That thesis has since evolved into something far more ambitious. Strategy no longer views itself primarily as a software company with Bitcoin on its balance sheet. It has effectively repositioned itself as a Bitcoin acquisition vehicle, using the capital markets machinery available to a publicly listed company — equity issuances, preferred stock offerings, convertible notes — to continuously raise fresh capital and deploy it into Bitcoin. The software business still exists and still generates revenue, but it has become secondary to the mission of accumulating as much Bitcoin as possible. The funding infrastructure behind these purchases has grown increasingly sophisticated. Alongside the April 6 purchase disclosure, Strategy confirmed it is running two parallel capital raise programs: a $21 billion at-the-market common stock offering under the MSTR ticker, and a $21 billion preferred stock offering under the STRC ticker. The STRC instrument is particularly notable because it is designed to attract fixed-income investors — institutions and individuals who want some form of Bitcoin-linked exposure but prefer the structure and predictability of a preferred security over the full volatility of equity. According to recent disclosures, the STRC channel has grown from near-zero utilization roughly a year ago to representing approximately 8% of Strategy's total capital raise activity. That shift matters because it signals the company is actively broadening its investor base, accessing capital pools that were previously untapped, and building a more resilient funding engine that is less dependent on any single instrument or investor category. This approach to capital raising is itself a kind of financial innovation. Strategy is essentially functioning as a leveraged Bitcoin acquisition platform, using the mechanisms of traditional capital markets to accumulate a scarce asset at scale. The bet embedded in this model is that the long-term appreciation of Bitcoin will exceed the cost of capital required to finance the accumulation, and that shareholders and preferred holders will ultimately be rewarded for their patience and their willingness to absorb near-term volatility and mark-to-market losses. The one-week pause in purchases that preceded this buy is worth examining more closely. During the week ending March 29, Strategy reported no new Bitcoin acquisitions — the first such week in a very long time. It came on the heels of one of the most aggressive single-week purchases in the company's history: 22,337 BTC bought for approximately $1.57 billion in a single week earlier in March. A pause after that kind of outlay is understandable from a capital management perspective. The company had likely deployed a significant portion of its available liquidity and needed time to reload its capacity through fresh equity or STRC issuances before resuming purchases. The return to buying in the first week of April, at $329.9 million, confirms that the reload happened and that the machine is running again. Zooming out to the full first quarter of 2026, the scale of Strategy's accumulation is genuinely staggering. The company purchased 89,316 BTC in Q1 alone, spending approximately $6.3 billion over the course of roughly ninety days. That is an average of nearly1,000 Bitcoin per day, every day, for three months straight. No other corporate entity, no sovereign wealth fund, and no publicly disclosed institutional buyer comes close to matching that pace of accumulation in a single quarter. It is a number that underscores just how dominant Strategy has become as a buyer in the Bitcoin market and how central this accumulation program has become to the company's identity and operations. Michael Saylor, for his part, has been articulating a broader philosophical framework to contextualize this behavior. In public statements made over the weekend before the April 6 filing, he declared that the traditional four-year Bitcoin halving cycle is no longer the primary driver of price action. His argument is that Bitcoin has crossed a threshold of institutional legitimacy from which it will not retreat, and that capital flows — driven by banks, asset managers, and digital credit mechanisms — have replaced retail sentiment and supply shocks as the dominant force shaping Bitcoin's price trajectory. He described Bitcoin as having won, framing it as digital capital that has achieved global consensus as a store of value. He also pointed to governance risk, not technical vulnerability, as the most pressing threat to Bitcoin going forward, warning specifically against attempts to alter the protocol in ways that would undermine its core properties. Whether one finds that framing persuasive or overly promotional, it provides important context for why Strategy continues to buy into weakness. Saylor is not operating on a short time horizon. He is not looking at next quarter's price target or trying to buy at the exact bottom of a cycle. The company's entire posture is premised on the belief that Bitcoin held over a decade or more will compound in value at a rate that justifies the cost of capital required to accumulate it, the unrealized losses incurred along the way, and the concentration risk inherent in putting the vast majority of a company's financial identity into a single asset. The competitive landscape surrounding Strategy's position has shifted meaningfully in recent months, and that shift adds another layer of context to this latest purchase. Several companies that had publicly committed to Bitcoin treasury strategies are now liquidating their holdings. MARA Holdings, one of the largest publicly listed Bitcoin mining companies in the United States, sold over 15,000 BTC in March 2026, raising approximately $1.1 billion and trimming its treasury down to 38,689 BTC. Riot Platforms sold its entire Bitcoin production from March, amounting to 3,778 coins. Genius Group, an AI-focused education company that had positioned itself as a Bitcoin treasury firm, liquidated the last of its 84 BTC holdings to retire debt. Cango Inc. sold4,451 BTC. GD Culture Group authorized the sale of a portion of its 7,500 BTC treasury. These are not isolated events. They represent a broader pattern of corporate Bitcoin holders reducing exposure under financial pressure during a period of sustained price weakness. The contrast with Strategy could not be more stark. While the rest of the corporate Bitcoin ecosystem is shrinking its exposure, Strategy is expanding its own by hundreds of millions of dollars at a time. That divergence is significant not just as a market signal but as a statement about the different financial conditions, risk tolerances, and time horizons that separate Strategy from most of its peers. Financially, the company is in a position where it can sustain this behavior in ways that most others cannot. Its ability to continuously access capital markets through MSTR equity offerings and STRC preferred issuances gives it a funding mechanism that does not depend on its Bitcoin holdings appreciating in the short term. As long as investors — equity and fixed-income alike — remain willing to fund Strategy's purchase program, the company can continue buying regardless of where Bitcoin trades on any given day. That said, the risks embedded in this model are real and should not be glossed over. Strategy is now carrying approximately $58 billion in cost basis across its Bitcoin holdings, and the current market value of that position is several billion dollars below that figure. If Bitcoin were to experience a prolonged and severe downturn, the pressure on Strategy's capital raise capacity would intensify, because investor appetite for MSTR shares and STRC instruments is not entirely independent of Bitcoin's price. A sustained bear market would likely make it more expensive and more difficult for the company to raise fresh capital, which could in turn constrain its ability to maintain the accumulation pace that has defined its recent quarters. The $0.5 billion additional valuation allowance flagged in the Q1 disclosures is a small but real indicator that the financial consequences of prolonged weakness are beginning to accumulate on the balance sheet. None of this appears to be changing the calculus for Saylor and the Strategy team at this moment. The April 6 filing represents the clearest possible statement of intent: the company bought below its own cost basis, in a down market, after being forced by financial mechanics to pause for a week, and it bought at a scale that most institutional participants would consider substantial. The 4,871 BTC added to the treasury pushes the total holding steadily closer to the 800,000 BTC milestone, a psychological threshold the market will be watching carefully in the weeks ahead. At the current pace of accumulation, and assuming Strategy continues to access capital markets at a comparable rate, that threshold is well within reach before the end of 2026. The question that remains — and that the market is actively debating — is whether the conviction driving that accumulation will ultimately be vindicated by Bitcoin's long-term price trajectory, or whether the concentration of risk at this scale will one day demand a reckoning that no amount of preferred stock issuance can fully absorb. For now, Strategy has answered that question the only way it ever does: by buying more.
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StrawberryIce

StrawberryIce

22 ore fa
10w本金起步挑战一年时间到500w,第54天,当下47.4w,目前已翻4倍。[淘股吧] 了解我的朋友都知道我擅长情绪捕捉强势个股,以及N字战法捕捉龙头,接下来的时间我都会坚持在这里更新实盘,分享一些我看好的个股机会和实战思路,觉得我分享的个股逻辑和实战思路不错的话,点赞、关注支持一波! 持有:鹭燕yy、云南zy、亨通gd 新入:鹭燕yy、云南zy、亨通gd 出局:特发xx、美诺h 今天早盘A股还在缩量震荡,指数拉升,中小盘还是比较活跃的,像今天的个股和板块都在反弹,像上周五提前上车的鹭燕yy,前面洗盘了一段时间,目前趋势和量能都很不错,成功涨停! 恭喜跟上节奏吃肉的朋友们!没跟上朋友也没关系,每天晚上我会花时间去筛选第二天看好的个股机会来做分享,如果明天开盘趋势可以就直接入,今天这篇文章点赞集齐15个,评论区留178。 ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-71e70d8c44-8e34ff5c52-8b7abd-badf29) 自4197点以来的调整浪依旧在进行中,目前处于4浪反弹末端,牛线压制太过明显。这里容易开启5浪,即做双底或者击破前低。量能依旧是核心。 牛熊线本周依旧处于破位姿态,继续控制仓位多看少动,等待指数确认企稳信号+中东局势明朗再回补仓位、考虑开新仓。 关于今天:向上压力:3890,3900(整数位);两大支撑点:3870,3850; 牛线趋势线,今天如果会在3910附近(超级重要)!牛线没有突破之前,都是反抽,非反转! 大盘情绪连续两天过冷,短期修复一触即发。 笔记内容均为个人模拟账号记录,不构成投资建议,不代表对未来收益的承诺,投资有风险,入市需谨慎!
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