Houston Chronicle Sunday

Economic divide opens in aerospace industry

Commercial production is taking a hit during the pandemic, while the defense sector makes gains

- By Aaron Gregg

Third-quarter financial earnings reported in recent weeks reveal a stark economic divide in America’s aerospace industry, an export-rich sector that employs hundreds of thousands of manufactur­ing workers across all 50 states.

The economic crisis caused by the coronaviru­s has elevated those who build jets, missiles and other advanced weaponry for the U.S. military and its allies. But companies involved in commercial aircraft production have seen their finances wrecked by a persistent global slowdown in air travel.

Analysts said the divide illustrate­s how the coronaviru­s has created unexpected winners and losers throughout the economy.

“Companies that are largely in the defense business are doing just fine ... the impact of COVID-19 on their operations has been minimal,” said Ron Epstein, managing director for aerospace and defense at Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Research.

“It looks like it’s going to be a pretty rough winter for commercial aerospace,” Epstein later added.

Companies that make or contribute to the production of commercial jets have been forced to make tough choices as airline demand for new jets has collapsed. And the workforce has often born the brunt of it.

Waltham, Mass.-based manufactur­er Raytheon Technologi­es has laid off almost 20,000 people who worked primarily in the company’s engine and aircraft parts divisions, executives said. The staff reductions account for about a fifth of the company’s commercial workforce, which it only recently obtained through a massive merger with a company previously known as United Technologi­es.

Collins Aerospace, an aircraft parts manufactur­er that Raytheon acquired in the deal, reported a 34 percent drop in sales in the third quarter of 2020 compared to last year. Pratt & Whitney, a Connecticu­tbased jet engine manufactur­er acquired in the same transactio­n, also lost about a third of its sales.

Raytheon Chief Executive Greg Hayes told investors the staff reductions were “difficult but necessary,” adding that the company is planning for “a long, slow recovery.”

“The fact is we don’t think you’re going to see return to normalcy until probably mid-2023 at the earliest,” Hayes said.

The recovery “is clearly not a V,” Hayes said, referring to a quick bounceback that many had hoped would follow the economic crisis.

Few in the industry have been hit harder than Boeing, the beleaguere­d Chicago-based jet manufactur­er. Boeing entered the crisis in a weak position because its flagship 737 Max jet was grounded due to equipment problems. The Max still has not been cleared to fly.

Boeing has kept its head abovewater only by loading itself up with debt, and carrying out aggressive restructur­ing efforts to prepare for years of depressed sales.

In early May it raised $25 billion in a corporate bond sale, making its debt comparable to that of some small sovereign nations like New Zealand and Iceland. It started another bond sale Thursday that should free up even more cash.

It has also carried out aggressive staff cuts, redirectin­g entire product lines to conserve resources.

Boeing announced last week it will cut its global workforce to 130,000 by the end of 2021; it started 2020 with 160,000. The cutbacks will have a particular effect in Everett, Wash., north of Seattle, which faces steep cutbacks related to production of the 787 Dreamliner. That production line is being consolidat­ed at a nonunion factory in South Carolina.

Companies that get a majority of their revenue from government contracts — General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman in particular — are doing well by comparison.

“At least COVID-wise, the defense industrial base has been somewhat of a haven from the storms that are buffeting the economy,” saidWes Hallman, vice president at the National Defense Industrial Associatio­n.

Despite the operationa­l disruption the pandemic caused to their government customers, those companies benefited from an early declaratio­n that businesses involved in national security should be declared essential. They were also helped by improved financing terms that the Pentagon approved early on in the crisis, and bailout funding that was directed at some of their suppliers.

Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest defense contractor and the maker of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, had its best quarter ever. It reported record sales of $16.5 billion, representi­ng an 8.7 percent increase over the previous quarter.

George Ferguson, an aerospace analyst with Bloomberg, said the recent results also show how some companies may have over-invested in commercial aircraft before the crisis.

 ?? Dale de la Rey / AFP via Getty Images ?? The defense industrial sector, armed with hefty government contracts, has soared during the pandemic as commercial aerospace struggles with travel restrictio­ns.
Dale de la Rey / AFP via Getty Images The defense industrial sector, armed with hefty government contracts, has soared during the pandemic as commercial aerospace struggles with travel restrictio­ns.

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