Full-Time

C&TO Finance Leader

Posted on 2/21/2026

GE Aerospace

GE Aerospace

10,001+ employees

American aircraft engine supplier and manufacturer

No salary listed

Sharonville, OH, USA

In Person

Category
Finance & Banking (1)
Required Skills
Forecasting
Requirements
  • Bachelors Degree accredited college or university + Minimum of 5 years of accounting/finance experience
Responsibilities
  • Provide financial support for C&TO Operational Leadership team, including visibility to C&TO financials and ad hoc project support.
  • Own Tariff mitigation efforts financially, including daily / weekly management, mitigation projects underway, direction of future mitigation projects, WOR bowler updates. Will have visibility to Tariff areas such as duty drawback, solicitations, FTZ, bonded shipments, etc.
  • Own Tariff FP&A model, including updates for all relevant FP&A cycles (estimate, forecast, LRF / Budget). Should include real-time updates as Tariff learning evolves.
  • Engage with Distribution and Transportation teams to drive financial and operational performance, including key areas of transportation spend, shop performance, distribution strategy, etc.
  • Develop expertise within C&TO function, provide professional / thought / financial leadership. Influence direction and delivery of outcomes.
Desired Qualifications
  • Experience with Supply Chain Finance or Tariffs
  • Strong oral and written communication skills.
  • Strong interpersonal and leadership skills.
  • Demonstrated ability to analyze and resolve problems.
  • Demonstrated ability to lead programs / projects.
  • Ability to document, plan, market, and execute programs.
  • Established project management skills.

GE Aerospace designs and manufactures jet engines and systems for commercial and military aircraft while providing global maintenance and repair services. These engines work by compressing air, mixing it with fuel for combustion, and using the resulting high-pressure gas to spin turbines that generate thrust. The company distinguishes itself through a massive global service network and a vast installed base of engines that allows for extensive data collection and specialized lifecycle support. Its goal is to provide reliable propulsion and maintenance solutions that define the future of flight for airlines and defense forces worldwide.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

Debt Financing

Total Funding

$1B

Headquarters

Evendale, Ohio

Founded

1889

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Q1 2026 orders jumped 87% to $23 billion, signaling strong demand.
  • The British Army T700 support contract extends recurring defense service revenue.
  • Pune and Mexico investments increase capacity for GE90, GEnx, GE9X, and LEAP programs.

What critics are saying

  • Boeing and Airbus delivery delays restrict near-term engine shipments.
  • LEAP and T700 program issues would hit deliveries, services, and credibility simultaneously.
  • CFM dependence exposes GE Aerospace to Safran disputes over rates, costs, or certification.

What makes GE Aerospace unique

  • GE Aerospace combines OEM engine sales with high-margin aftermarket services.
  • Its CFM International joint venture anchors the LEAP commercial engine franchise.
  • Fort Worth, Pune, Hermosillo, and Saltillo expand global service and manufacturing depth.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

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Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Paid Vacation

Parental Leave

Adoption Assistance

Relocation Assistance

Company News

MilitaryLeak
May 26th, 2026
GE Aerospace awarded T700 engine support contract for British Army's AH-64E fleet.

GE Aerospace awarded T700 engine support contract for British Army's AH-64E fleet. May 26, 2026 Cheltenham, UK-GE Aerospace has been awarded a three-year contract from Boeing Defence UK Ltd to extend support for the T700-GE-T701D engines powering the British Army's Apache AH-64E fleet. Under the Performance Based Logistics (PBL) agreement, GE Aerospace will provide an on-site Field Service Representative (FSR) at Wattisham Flying Station in Suffolk, UK, and deliver logistics management, technical support, and material, as well as repair and maintenance of engines and line-replaceable units (LRUs) through StandardAero in Gosport, UK. With more than 25,000 engines produced and over 100 million flight hours accumulated over four decades, the T700 family powers platforms across 50 countries, serving more than 130 customers for transport, medical evacuation, air rescue, special operations, and maritime patrol missions. Military Newsletters Discover more Military equipment news Aerial Warfare Analysis Battlefield mission trials "We are proud to continue our longstanding relationship with Boeing Defence and support the British Army," said Paul Ferraro, vice president and general manager, Defense Engines & Services, GE Aerospace. "This agreement strengthens regional support and services for the UK Apache fleet, helping ensure readiness and availability." On 11 July 2016, the Ministry of Defence confirmed a U.S. Foreign Military Sale (FMS) worth $2.3 billion (~$2.94 billion in 2024) for 50 AH-64Es to be built in Mesa, Arizona. The deal included an initial support contract for maintenance, spare parts, and training simulators; components from the older WAH-64s "will be reused and incorporated into the new helicopters where possible." The type entered service with the British Army in 2022. Approval for the re-manufacture of fifty of the UK's WAH-64 Mk 1 fleet to AH-64E Apache Guardian standard was given by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency in August 2015.[203] They utilize the General Electric T700 engine rather than the Turbomeca RTM322 of the WAH-64; the first off-the-shelf purchase of a GE engine by the Ministry of Defence. The first two AH-64Es were delivered to the British Army on 26 November 2020. The older AH1 (WAH-64) were retired by 2024 in favour of the AH-64E models. General Electric Company, doing business as GE Aerospace, is an American aircraft engine supplier that is headquartered in Evendale, Ohio, outside Cincinnati. It is the legal successor to the original General Electric Company founded in 1892. GE Aerospace is a global aerospace propulsion, services, and systems leader with an installed base of approximately 50,000 commercial and 30,000 military aircraft engines. With a global team of approximately 57,000 employees building on more than a century of innovation and learning, GE Aerospace is committed to inventing the future of flight, lifting people up, and bringing them home safely. GE Aerospace both manufactures engines under its name and partners with other manufacturers to produce engines. CFM International, the world's leading supplier of aircraft engines and GE's most successful partnership, is a 50/50 joint venture with the French company Safran Aircraft Engines. Post Views: 32

Metrotechs
May 20th, 2026
GE Aerospace breaks ground on $35M Fort Worth MRO expansion - A demand signal for DFW's aviation supply chain.

GE Aerospace breaks ground on $35M Fort Worth MRO expansion - A demand signal for DFW's aviation supply chain. GE Aerospace has begun a $35 million expansion of its Fort Worth on-wing support facility near DFW International Airport, backed by a city tax abatement tied to workforce growth. This regional brief examines what the expansion means for DFW-area manufacturers and suppliers in the aerospace MRO supply chain, covering... Construction is now underway on a $35 million expansion of GE Aerospace's on-wing support facility in Fort Worth, according to reporting by the Fort Worth Report and corroborated by WFAA and the Dallas Business Journal. The facility, located near DFW International Airport, handles engine maintenance and inspection services performed directly on aircraft - without removing the engine from the wing. The expansion is tied to a tax abatement agreement with the City of Fort Worth; The Texan News references the abatement in connection with the deal, though the specific terms, duration, and dollar value have not been independently confirmed for this brief. The Dallas Business Journal first reported on the expansion in approximately August 2024. Construction starting in April 2026 indicates a multi-phase development timeline, and the $35 million scale represents a capital commitment consistent with significant facility upgrades, not a routine tenant improvement project. What on-wing MRO actually requires from suppliers. GE Aerospace's OnWing Support program performs line maintenance, borescope inspections, and engine repairs on the aircraft itself, prioritizing turnaround speed and minimizing aircraft-on-ground (AOG) time for airline customers. That operational model has distinct supply chain implications that differ substantially from heavy MRO shops doing full engine teardowns. On-wing operations depend on specialized tooling and engine access fixtures, borescope and non-destructive testing (NDT) equipment, consumables including lubricants, sealants, and engine-certified cleaning agents, precision fasteners and hardware, coatings and repair materials for hot-section components, and FAA-certificated A&P mechanics with engine experience. Proximity is a structural advantage in this segment. AOG situations create intense pressure for same-day or next-day delivery. Local and regional suppliers who can guarantee rapid fulfillment of consumables and hardware to a Fort Worth facility have a competitive edge over national distributors managing longer lead times. A $35 million facility expansion signals sustained work volume that makes that kind of supplier relationship worth formalizing. Fort Worth's incentive play. The tax abatement attached to this deal is not incidental. Cities extend abatements to compete for industrial facilities that generate jobs, anchor supply chain ecosystems, and expand the long-term tax base - they do not extend them for projects they expect to be marginal. Fort Worth's willingness to structure an incentive agreement for a GE Aerospace MRO expansion signals that city economic development officials view aerospace maintenance as a priority industrial sector. That posture matters beyond this single deal. Fort Worth already anchors a substantial aerospace cluster: Lockheed Martin Aeronautics operates its F-35 production facility in the city, Bell Textron maintains significant rotorcraft operations in nearby Hurst, and American Airlines is headquartered at DFW Airport - one of the world's busiest aviation hubs by operations. A city that actively competes for aerospace investment through structured incentives is more likely to attract the next facility, expansion, and supply chain tenant. For manufacturers evaluating site selection or partnership development in North Texas, that track record is relevant context. The aftermarket demand backdrop. The Fort Worth expansion reflects specific conditions in commercial aviation's current maintenance cycle. Post-pandemic recovery has substantially increased global flight cycles, compressing maintenance intervals and accelerating demand for engine services. Separately, sustained delivery delays from both Boeing and Airbus have extended the operational service life of older-generation narrowbody fleets - including aircraft powered by CFM56 engines, which GE co-produces with Safran through CFM International. Older engines on extended service lives require more frequent inspection and repair, precisely the work an on-wing support facility performs. GE Aerospace has publicly prioritized services and aftermarket revenue as a strategic growth line in its investor communications, describing it as a higher-margin segment than new engine sales. Facility expansions in high-density hub markets - where a major narrowbody operator like American Airlines generates consistent maintenance cycles - are a logical execution of that strategy. DFW's position as American's primary hub means the demand feeding this facility is structural, not cyclical. What DFW suppliers should do with this signal. The manufacturers and service providers with the most direct relevance are those already serving aviation MRO or adjacent industrial segments: precision component manufacturers, specialty tooling producers, coatings and surface treatment shops, NDT inspection service providers, industrial distributors with aviation-grade product lines, and technical staffing firms placing certified aviation mechanics. For those businesses, a confirmed $35 million capital investment by a major OEM-affiliated operator is a leading indicator of sustained purchasing volume - not a one-time procurement event. On-wing support operations generate ongoing, repeatable demand for consumables and services, not a single large contract opportunity. The broader ecosystem effect is also worth tracking. Large anchor facilities in specialized industrial sectors tend to attract complementary operations - parts suppliers, support service firms, and secondary MRO operators - to the same geography over time. Fort Worth's combination of DFW Airport proximity, an active city incentive posture, and an established aerospace cluster makes it a credible candidate for continued MRO investment beyond GE's current footprint. The Fort Worth Report's April 2026 coverage and the original Dallas Business Journal reporting are the primary sources for specifics on this expansion; readers seeking confirmed investment figures, job creation commitments tied to the abatement, or facility square footage should consult those outlets directly. Sources and supporting resources

Yahoo Finance
Apr 6th, 2026
GE Aerospace drops 8.7% YTD despite $190B backlog and strong defence contracts

GE Aerospace shares have declined 8.7% year to date, underperforming the industry's 2% growth, amid concerns over macroeconomic volatility, rising fuel prices, supply chain constraints and high valuations. The stock trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 36.28 times, above the industry average of 31.21 times. Despite these headwinds, GE maintains a record backlog of $190 billion. The company is benefiting from strong demand for its LEAP, GEnx and GE9X engines, driven by growing air traffic and fleet expansion. It secured over 500 engine wins at the 2025 Dubai Airshow and a $5 billion contract from the US Air Force. GE expects low-double-digit revenue growth in 2026 and plans to invest $1 billion in US manufacturing. However, rising operating costs pressured margins in Q4 2025.

Yahoo Finance
Mar 31st, 2026
Daiwa sets $301 target for GE Aerospace with neutral rating amid $362 Street consensus and 38x forward P/E

Daiwa initiated coverage of GE Aerospace with a Neutral rating and $301 price target, significantly below Wall Street's $361.89 consensus. The firm cited strong fundamentals but warned that high expectations already priced into the stock leave little room for error, with 2027–2028 estimates potentially at risk. GE Aerospace delivered impressive Q4 results, with revenue hitting $12.72 billion and beating estimates by 19.69%. Full-year free cash flow more than doubled to $7.694 billion, whilst the company's backlog stands near $190 billion. Management has guided for 2026 adjusted EPS of $7.10–$7.40. However, shares have fallen 20.05% over the past month to $273.25, trading at a forward P/E of 38.02. Daiwa's stance contrasts sharply with 17 Buy ratings and zero Holds from other analysts.

Aeroflap
Mar 26th, 2026
The technology that changed everything: how GE composites continue to lead efficiency in the skies.

The technology that changed everything: how GE composites continue to lead efficiency in the skies. March 26th, 2026 In 1995, a year marked by technological advances that redefined different sectors - such as the launch of Windows 95 from Microsoft and the premiere of Amazon Commercial aviation also took a decisive leap. In that same year, the GE Aerospace It introduced the GE90 engine to the market, the first to incorporate blades made of polymer matrix composites in a commercial application. ADVERTISING Three decades later, innovation remains at the heart of the evolution of aircraft engines. A structural change in engine engineering. Replacing traditional titanium blades with carbon fiber composites represented a breakthrough in engineering. Lighter and highly resistant, these materials made it possible to reduce the overall weight of the engine, improve fuel efficiency, and increase the fan diameter - a factor directly linked to increased thrust. The result was an engine that not only set new performance standards but also paved the way for continuous advances in energy efficiency. With a bore of 128 inches, the GE90 stood out at the time as a benchmark in power among widebody engines. ADVERTISING Furthermore, over the years, composite blades have demonstrated greater durability compared to metal versions. Currently, they have accumulated more than 300 million flight hours. on different commercial platforms. Technological evolution and expanded applications. Following its initial success, the technology was progressively incorporated into new programs. The GEnx engine, widely used in Boeing 787 DreamlinerIt also began to feature fairings and structures made of composite materials. Meanwhile, the LEAP engine, developed by CFM International - a joint venture between GE and Safran - brought innovation to the single-aisle aircraft segment. The most advanced stage of this evolution is in the GE9X engine, designed to equip the Boeing 777X. The model incorporates decades of refinement in design and materials, allowing, for example, a reduction in the number of fan blades - from 22 in the GE90 to 16 - without compromising performance. On the contrary, aerodynamic and structural optimization enhances the overall efficiency of the engine. Foundation for the next generation. More than just established, composite technology has become the foundation for the future of aeronautical propulsion. The knowledge accumulated over decades now fuels initiatives such as the program. CFM RISE, which seeks to develop a new generation of engines with at least a 20% gain in energy efficiency compared to current models. ADVERTISING Among the concepts being studied is the "open fan" (open fan), which promises significant fuel consumption gains, while posing challenges such as noise reduction - an area in which composites also play a central role, thanks to their structural versatility. Over the course of 30 years, polymer matrix composites have gone from being a technological gamble to becoming one of the cornerstones of modern aviation. More than just reducing weight, they have enabled new paradigms in design, performance, and sustainability. Today, by powering engines like the GE9X and paving the way for future programs, this innovation demonstrates that its impact is far from over - on the contrary, it continues to play a leading role in building the next era of commercial aviation.

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