Bangkok Post

WINGS CLIPPED

- JOHN BIERS

Boeing pares spending amid the twin crises of 737 MAX delays and the virus crippling the airline industry.

NEW YORK: Boeing Co will suspend most hiring and overtime pay as it works to conserve cash in the face of twin crises over the 737 MAX and a massive slowdown in travel due to coronaviru­s.

Shares of Boeing plunged more than 18% on Wednesday in another bruising day for Wall Street as the company announced the belt-tightening measures after disclosing dozens of MAX plane cancellati­ons.

In addition, sources confirmed the aviation giant already essentiall­y tapped a $13 billion loan package finalised just last month.

“It’s critical for any company to preserve cash in challengin­g periods,” Boeing chief executive David Calhoun wrote in a message to workers.

He announced the company would limit travel and bar overtime except in “critical” cases, and pause new hiring pending a review.

“The year ahead is shaping up to be as challengin­g for our business as any in the recent past,” said the message co-signed by chief financial officer Greg Smith.

“On top of the work of safely returning the 737 MAX to service and the financial impact of the pause in MAX production, we’re now facing a global economic disruption generated by the Covid-19.”

The announceme­nt came as Boeing reported 43 cancellati­ons for the MAX in 2020 as of the end of February in a monthly update on its website.

The company also experience­d a big drop in plane deliveries, which stood at 30 at the end of February, compared with 95 in the year-ago period.

The MAX has been grounded for the past year after two crashes that killed 346 people, spawning numerous lawsuits and investigat­ions.

The anaemic orders suggest another rough year for Boeing financials after the company in 2019 suffered its first annual loss in more than two decades.

Boeing last month reached agreement with a consortium of large banks for a $13 billion two-year credit agreement to finance its activities.

Sources confirmed to AFP a Bloomberg report that it planned to draw down all of the funds as early as this week.

Boeing has said it expects the MAX to receive regulatory approval to return to the skies at mid-year, but that would come at a highly uncertain time for airlines.

Carriers around the world have cancelled thousands of flights as the coronaviru­s effectivel­y shuts down key markets like China and Italy and chills air travel more broadly.

Shares of Boeing plunged 18.2% to $189.15 Wednesday, the biggest drag on the Dow.

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