Toronto Star

Boeing to cut 7,000 jobs as firm adjusts to ‘new reality’

Company has burned through about $22B in cash since March 2019

- JULIE JOHNSSON

Boeing Co. is deepening job cuts as the coronaviru­s pandemic and prolonged grounding of the 737 Max jetliner squeeze the planemaker’s finances.

An additional 7,000 jobs are slated for eliminatio­n by the end of next year, bringing the total cuts made through retirement­s, attrition and layoffs to 30,000 people, Boeing said in an email Wednesday after reporting earnings. In all, the plane maker is cutting 19 per cent of its pre-pandemic workforce after an unpreceden­ted collapse in air travel and jetliner sales.

“We’re aligning to this new reality by closely managing our liquidity and transformi­ng our enterprise to be sharper, more resilient and more sustainabl­e for the long term,” CEO Dave Calhoun said in a statement.

Once a prodigious cash generator, Boeing is now carefully monitoring its liquidity and soaring debt while navigating the deep slump in air travel and working with regulators to lift the Max’s flying ban. Boeing has burned through about $22 billion (U.S.) in free cash since March 2019, when regulators grounded the company’s bestsellin­g jet after two fatal accidents.

The shares tumbled 52 per cent this year through Tuesday, the biggest decline among the 30 members of the Dow Jones industrial average.

The Chicago-based company consumed about $5 billion in free cash during the third quarter, in line with analyst estimates and about $620 million less than a quarter earlier, when the pandemic forced the company to temporaril­y shut down much of its manufactur­ing. Boeing didn’t announce additional production cuts for its 787 and 737 Max, defying analyst expectatio­ns, and also got a $459-million income tax boost. “While losing money and burning through over $5 billion in three months is hardly good news, at least it wasn’t worse than this,” Robert Stallard, an analyst at Vertical Research Partners, said in a report.

Boeing reported an adjusted loss of $1.39 a share, better than the average shortfall of $2.08 expected by analysts. Sales dropped 29 per cent to $14.1 billion. Wall Street had predicted $13.8 billion.

Analysts are already looking ahead to 2021 and Boeing’s plans to clear its storage lots of around $16 billion of Max planes built during the grounding. Rising coronaviru­s cases are heaping additional pressure on airlines, which have leverage to scrap or renegotiat­e terms for Max jets with deliveries delayed more than a year.

Boeing’s affirmatio­n of its plan to build 31 of its single-aisle aircraft each month by early 2022 “suggests either (1) confidence in getting customers to accept most of the 450 Maxes in inventory for delivery in 2021 or (2) willingnes­s to take longer to pare the Max inventory,” said Cai von Rumohr, an analyst at Cowen & Co.

Airbus SE, which reports earnings Thursday, has also been buffeted by the pandemic. But the European plane maker has seen fewer cancellati­ons for its narrow-body jets than Boeing, and has even signalled suppliers to be prepared to raise production rates late next year if the market rebounds.

Questions are building as to how Boeing will counter a product lineup that includes Airbus A321neo jetliners — particular­ly longer-range versions of the narrow-body jet that are capable of replacing wide-body aircraft on trans-Atlantic routes.

While Boeing provides more detail on its tactics for cutting costs to survive the pandemic, analysts are starting to question its longer-term strategy and vision for the market that will emerge on the other side of the crisis.

“We need to start thinking about how the company is going to look coming out of this,” said Ken Herbert, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity,

 ?? DEAN RUTZ TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO ?? The 737 Max airliner was built at this Boeing plant in Renton, Wash. Analysts are looking ahead to 2021 and Boeing’s plans to clear its storage lots of about $16 billion in Max planes.
DEAN RUTZ TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO The 737 Max airliner was built at this Boeing plant in Renton, Wash. Analysts are looking ahead to 2021 and Boeing’s plans to clear its storage lots of about $16 billion in Max planes.

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