About the company
Safran SA, together with its subsidiaries, engages in the aerospace and defense businesses in France, rest of Europe, the Americas, the Asia-Pacific, Africa, and the Middle East. The company operates through three segments: Aerospace Propulsion; Aircraft Equipment, Defense and Aerosystems; and Aircraft Interiors. The Aerospace Propulsion segment designs, develops, produces, and markets propulsion and mechanical power transmission systems for commercial aircraft, military transport, training and combat aircraft, civil and military helicopters, and drones; and offers maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) services, as well as sells spare parts. The Aircraft Equipment, Defense and Aerosystems segment provides landing gears and brakes; nacelles and reversers; avionics, such as flight controls and onboard information systems; security systems, including evacuation slides and oxygen masks; onboard computers and fuel systems; electrical power management systems and related engineering services; optronic equipment and sights, navigation equipment and sensors, infantry, and drones; MRO services; and sells spare parts. The Aircraft Interiors segment designs, develops, manufactures, and markets aircraft seats for passengers and crew; cabin equipment, overhead bins, class dividers, passenger service units, cabin interior solutions, chilling systems, galleys, electrical inserts, and trolleys; and cabin equipment and passenger comfort-focused solutions such as water distribution, lavatories, air systems, and in-flight entertainment and connectivity (IFEC) solutions. The company's products and services are used in commercial civil and military aircrafts, and helicopters. Safran SA was founded in 1896 and is headquartered in Paris, France.
Price history
Monthly close · Moving average The average closing price over a rolling window — a smoothed line that cuts through day-to-day noise to show the trend. A shorter window (say 50 days) reacts quickly; a longer one (200 days, or 12 months) is slower and steadier. Price above its average is often read as strength, below as a relative discount. Learn more →
Dividend profile
Yield band A stock's current dividend yield shown against its own range over the past five years — the low, average and high. Near the high end the shares look relatively cheap for the income they pay; near the low end, relatively expensive. It's the picture behind Dividend Yield Theory. Learn more → (5-year)
Payment calendar
Dividend history
Per-share dividend by year
Debt & leverage
Latest reported balance-sheet figures.
Held by 1 investor
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