Bangkok Post

Boeing 737 MAX cancellati­ons climb in first half

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Boeing Co customers cancelled orders for 355 of its 737 MAX jets in the first half of 2020, the US planemaker said on Tuesday, as the damage done by the jet’s grounding and the coronaviru­s crisis to the airline industry continued to mount.

The planemaker, which has now been striving to get its once best-selling MAX planes back in the air for more than a year after two fatal crashes led to its grounding, said airlines and leasing companies cancelled another 60 orders for the jet last month.

Deliveries in the first half of the year also sank by 71% to just 70 planes as customers canceled or deferred shipments due to the collapse in air travel from coronaviru­s-led travel restrictio­ns.

Deliveries are financiall­y important to planemaker­s because airlines pay most of the purchase price when they actually receive the aircraft.

Boeing said it handed over 10 aircraft in June, up from four planes in May, and six jets in April.

The June cancellati­ons came from aircraft-leasing firms, including USbased Aviation Capital, Dublin-based Avolon and Singapore’s BOC Aviation, which respective­ly scrubbed 5, 17 and 30 orders for the 737 MAX.

Romanian carrier Blue Air also cancelled six 737 MAX orders, with another two 737 MAX orders halted by unidentifi­ed customers.

On the plus side, FedEx Corp booked an order for a 767 freighter, taking Boeing’s gross orders for the year to 59 planes as of the end of June.

After adjusting for jets ordered in previous years but unlikely to be delivered

currently, Boeing has now lost 784 net orders this year, rising from a loss of 602 net orders as of May end.

 ??  ?? A Boeing 737 MAX jet lands following a Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) test flight at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington on June 29.
A Boeing 737 MAX jet lands following a Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) test flight at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington on June 29.

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