MACON, Ga.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Blue Bird Corporation (Nasdaq: BLBD), the leader in electric and low-emission school buses, will debut its electric-powered step van at the upcoming 2024 Advanced Clean ...
If you poured all your savings into Tesla stock this time last year, you’d have lost more than 20 percent of your money. But school buses? Baby, if you’d bought Blue Bird stock instead, you’d be ...
Blue Bird showcases an electric-powered step van based on its groundbreaking Class 5-6 stripped chassis at the 2025 ACT Expo. The step van features a 178-inch wheelbase for last-mile-delivery vehicles ...
Blue Bird remains in focus as transportation markets react to changing industry trends, electric bus expansion, and evolving commercial vehicle demand.
In early May 2026, Blue Bird Corporation reported second-quarter results showing net income of US$29.3 million on sales of US$352.64 million, alongside record adjusted EBITDA, stronger cash flow and ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. This has been a difficult year for many electric vehicle companies.
For nearly a century, a substantial portion of America’s iconic yellow school buses have been manufactured at a factory in Fort Valley, a town of 9,000 people surrounded by peach and pecan orchards in ...
The site where Muhammad Ali’s motor home was built will soon be humming again. Not that The Greatest was the only one to snap up a WanderLodge back in the day when Blue Bird workers were churning out ...
Los Angeles Unified School District places order for 180 electric buses from Blue Bird Corporation, including 150 All American models and 30 Vision models. The first buses are scheduled to be ...
Quarterly earnings results are a good time to check in on a company’s progress, especially compared to its peers in the same ...
The site where Muhammed Ali's motor home was built will soon be humming again. Not that The Greatest was the only one to snap up a WanderLodge back in the day when Blue Bird workers were churning out ...