What if you invested $1,000 in Boeing in 2010? (Inflation-Adjusted)
BA · Industrial · Adjusted to 2026 dollars using BLS CPI-U data
View nominal (non-adjusted) versionBoeing turned $1,000 into $4,198 between 2010 and today. Impressive on paper, but inflation over that span came to 53% (BLS CPI-U). Adjusted for that erosion in purchasing power, your real gain in constant 2010 dollars is $2,744, which works out to a +6.4% annualized real growth rate over 16 years.
Nominal final value
$4,198
+319.8% total return
Real value (2010 dollars)
$2,744
+174.4% real total return
Real annualized return
+6.4%
vs. +9.2% nominal annualized
Year-by-Year (Inflation-Adjusted)
$1,000 in Boeing since 2010, values in constant 2010 dollars
| Year | Nominal Value | Real Value (2010 $) |
|---|---|---|
| 2010 | $1,000 | $1,000 |
| 2011 | $1,175 | $1,129 |
| 2012 | $1,285 | $1,210 |
| 2013 | $1,311 | $1,208 |
| 2014 | $2,267 | $2,060 |
| 2015 | $2,692 | $2,446 |
| 2016 | $2,282 | $2,043 |
| 2017 | $3,209 | $2,810 |
| 2018 | $7,152 | $6,077 |
| 2019 | $7,935 | $6,587 |
| 2020 | $6,700 | $5,474 |
| 2021 | $4,112 | $3,198 |
| 2022 | $4,240 | $3,021 |
| 2023 | $4,511 | $3,096 |
| 2024 | $4,469 | $2,979 |
| 2025 | $3,738 | $2,443 |
| 2026 | $4,949 | $3,235 |
Inflation adjustment uses BLS CPI-U annual data, deflated to 2026 dollars. Nominal stock data from Yahoo Finance (split-adjusted closing prices). Real values are expressed in constant 2010 purchasing-power dollars. For informational and educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. See our methodology and full disclaimer.