The Japan Times - Boeing shares dive as 777X, Air Force One woes lead to $1.2 bn loss

EUR -
AED 3.82231
AFN 77.31882
ALL 99.399399
AMD 413.723452
ANG 1.866397
AOA 951.693186
ARS 1096.501174
AUD 1.656378
AWG 1.873204
AZN 1.770434
BAM 1.962076
BBD 2.090919
BDT 126.283967
BGN 1.957809
BHD 0.392141
BIF 3065.249546
BMD 1.040669
BND 1.405015
BOB 7.155891
BRL 6.013092
BSD 1.035527
BTN 90.235653
BWP 14.463475
BYN 3.389022
BYR 20397.111907
BZD 2.080184
CAD 1.48632
CDF 2965.90639
CHF 0.939396
CLF 0.026365
CLP 1011.737351
CNY 7.567718
CNH 7.571757
COP 4335.166782
CRC 524.089088
CUC 1.040669
CUP 27.577728
CVE 110.618856
CZK 25.157136
DJF 184.412572
DKK 7.459739
DOP 63.996254
DZD 140.828916
EGP 52.371145
ERN 15.610035
ETB 132.509766
FJD 2.403477
FKP 0.857081
GBP 0.831593
GEL 2.955848
GGP 0.857081
GHS 15.947013
GIP 0.857081
GMD 74.92826
GNF 8950.761423
GTQ 8.004606
GYD 216.653047
HKD 8.105397
HNL 26.381023
HRK 7.679667
HTG 135.455257
HUF 406.579187
IDR 16982.104632
ILS 3.709621
IMP 0.857081
INR 91.004368
IQD 1356.539406
IRR 43812.164012
ISK 146.817975
JEP 0.857081
JMD 163.114134
JOD 0.738254
JPY 159.223917
KES 134.402509
KGS 91.006797
KHR 4164.38138
KMF 498.324235
KPW 936.602193
KRW 1503.932547
KWD 0.321026
KYD 0.862956
KZT 538.098728
LAK 22526.383883
LBP 92735.778389
LKR 310.206785
LRD 206.079223
LSL 19.435652
LTL 3.072825
LVL 0.629491
LYD 5.106408
MAD 10.436686
MDL 19.45351
MGA 4861.621818
MKD 61.56659
MMK 3380.052236
MNT 3536.193288
MOP 8.306271
MRU 41.339837
MUR 48.588609
MVR 16.020787
MWK 1795.670015
MXN 21.446117
MYR 4.603901
MZN 66.502268
NAD 19.435278
NGN 1553.281854
NIO 38.112099
NOK 11.64916
NPR 144.380324
NZD 1.830313
OMR 0.400666
PAB 1.035512
PEN 3.837676
PGK 4.216569
PHP 60.368686
PKR 288.870927
PLN 4.209488
PYG 8154.201844
QAR 3.775377
RON 4.976896
RSD 117.098158
RUB 102.323308
RWF 1462.700085
SAR 3.90299
SBD 8.819862
SCR 15.032457
SDG 625.441996
SEK 11.361779
SGD 1.404305
SHP 0.857081
SLE 23.82971
SLL 21822.307985
SOS 591.801632
SRD 36.532739
STD 21539.746677
SVC 9.060985
SYP 13530.777995
SZL 19.429432
THB 34.983652
TJS 11.287507
TMT 3.642341
TND 3.324234
TOP 2.437354
TRY 37.411737
TTD 7.023569
TWD 34.161023
TZS 2647.231856
UAH 43.22048
UGX 3811.191543
USD 1.040669
UYU 44.672903
UZS 13447.015384
VES 61.107416
VND 26152.011338
VUV 123.55031
WST 2.914734
XAF 658.071577
XAG 0.032089
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.81246
XDR 0.794252
XOF 658.071577
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.917913
ZAR 19.369871
ZMK 9367.263642
ZMW 29.125589
ZWL 335.094985
  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.27

    +0.41%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.68

    -0.3%

  • SCS

    0.2400

    11.31

    +2.12%

  • NGG

    -0.1500

    61.86

    -0.24%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.34

    -0.04%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    24.4

    +1.52%

  • BCC

    0.4300

    125.57

    +0.34%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    12.64

    +1.42%

  • RIO

    1.3500

    61.2

    +2.21%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    49.86

    +0.02%

  • GSK

    -0.0600

    34.84

    -0.17%

  • BTI

    0.4900

    40.23

    +1.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    7.4

    +0.68%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    68.96

    -1.31%

  • BP

    0.7700

    31.64

    +2.43%

  • VOD

    -0.2900

    8.2

    -3.54%

Boeing shares dive as 777X, Air Force One woes lead to $1.2 bn loss
Boeing shares dive as 777X, Air Force One woes lead to $1.2 bn loss / Photo: Giuseppe CACACE - AFP/File

Boeing shares dive as 777X, Air Force One woes lead to $1.2 bn loss

Boeing shares were in free-fall Wednesday after the aviation giant reported a $1.2 billion loss in an ugly quarter weighed down by fresh one-time costs on its Russia business, the Air Force One presidential jet and the new 777X plane.

Text size:

Shares were down more than nine percent at $151.26 in afternoon trading after Boeing's results badly missed analyst expectations and revealed yet another delay with its 777X model.

The loss marks the latest round of disappointing results for the commercial jet maker, which has also suspended deliveries of its 787 plane due to a series of production issues.

Offsetting those negatives somewhat has been the improvement in the commercial air market, as well as progress on ramping up deliveries of the 737 MAX, which was grounded for more than a year following two deadly crashes.

While acknowledging "messy" aspects to the report, Chief Executive Dave Calhoun urged a long-term perspective on the company.

"We are a long-cycle business, and the success of our efforts will be measured over years and decades, not quarters," Calhoun said in a message to employees.

"The deliberate actions we're taking now will drive stability in our operations and position us for long-term, sustainable performance."

But Calhoun faced pointed questions on an analyst call over the company's growing litany of problems, while asserting that the company was making progress on a turnaround.

The company's loss was more than twice the $537 million shortfall in the year-ago period. Revenues came in at $14 billion, down eight percent.

- Production costs rising -

Boeing said in a press release the new timeframe for the 777X, "reflects an updated assessment of the time to meet certification requirements," and also announced plans for a "temporary pause" on production for the aircraft through 2023.

The big US aerospace company now expects first deliveries of the plane in 2025, resulting in a $1.5 billion hit to profits.

Work on the 777X began in 2013, but the timeframe has been repeatedly pushed back as Boeing addresses certification questions from US air safety regulators.

Boeing's defense division booked about $1 billion in costs on the presidential plane, Air Force One, and a second military aircraft, the T-7A Red Hawk.

Air Force One suffered from "higher supplier costs, higher costs to finalize technical requirements and schedule delays," while the T-7A was beset with "supply chain constraints, Covid-19 and inflationary pressures," Boeing said.

Boeing has suspended engineering support, flight training and other services for Russia customers. The company had $212 million in costs in the quarter linked to Ukraine.

Boeing announced no new additional costs connected to the 787 Dreamliner, for which deliveries have been halted since May while it deals with problems raised by US air safety regulators.

Calhoun offered no timeframe on resuming 787 deliveries, but said the company had submitted its certification plan to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), calling it an "important step."

On the positive side, Boeing reported a jump in 737 MAX deliveries during the quarter and said it was on track to lift production of the plane to 31 per-month in the second quarter.

- Certification questions -

Calhoun also offered an upbeat view on the aviation market, pointing to a "broadening" recovery in commercial travel as "operators look to bring capacity back online and plan for growth."

Calhoun pushed back against analyst questions on whether the company suffered from systemic problems with its engineering department, saying an earlier reorganization he implemented to emphasize safety had helped.

The CEO said some of the latest charges were due to factors beyond the company's control, such as Covid-19 lockdowns and supply chain shortages that have raised costs.

But Calhoun acknowledged that Boeing is facing more scrutiny from air safety regulators that has broadly affected certification, including with the 777X and 787. The FAA came in for heavy criticism for its oversight of Boeing during the MAX's initial certification.

"It's changed," Calhoun said of how regulators approach certification. "They take a little longer than they used to. They're a little more thorough than they used to be. Boeing is better for it in the long run."

The myriad problems mean Boeing's operations will probably not "stabilize" until 2024 or 2025, said Michel Merluzeau, an analyst at AirInsight Group, adding that the company also appears to lack significant new commercial plane prospects for the 2030s.

H.Takahashi--JT