The Oklahoman

Boeing fortunes brighten as Trump warms to Ex-Im Bank

- BY JULIE JOHNSSON, THOMAS BLACK AND AUSTIN WEINSTEIN Bloomberg

After a rocky start, Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg appears to have gained the ear of President Donald Trump.

The U.S. plane maker was one of Trump’s first post-election corporate targets, and a tweet about soaring Air Force One costs briefly tanked the company’s shares in December. But the Twitter tirade also gave Muilenburg an opening to press the case of the largest U.S. exporter — and the 1.5 million jobs at its jet-equipment suppliers — in meetings with Trump.

The CEO’s entreaties seem to have worked. Trump has emerged as a booster for Boeing’s F/A-18 fighter jets and voiced support to lawmakers for a key Boeing initiative: reopening the U.S. Export-Import Bank for major deals. Trump will fly to Boeing’s South Carolina factory to attend an event Friday showcasing the newest 787 Dreamliner, where he’s expected to make an announceme­nt about the federal export credit agency.

“The supply chain for Boeing doesn’t just run through the state of Washington,” said Howard Rubel, an analyst at Jefferies.

The Ex-Im Bank is “a door opener.”

Supporting the lender would put Trump at odds with some fellow Republican­s, who view the bank as providing corporate welfare.

‘Bank of Boeing’

Ex-Im has been dubbed the “Bank of Boeing” for the backing it has given to aircraft purchases by airlines unable to tap convention­al credit markets. But it’s been blocked from providing loan guarantees of more than $10 million because it lacks a board member whose nomination has been stuck in a Senate committee since 2015.

Trump is committed to re-establishi­ng a quorum on the bank’s board, Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a Democrat from North Dakota, said after a Feb. 9 bipartisan lunch meeting between the president and lawmakers. That’s needed to allow the bank to lend more as it faces a backlog of as much as $30 billion in projects.

Sen. Richard Shelby, an opponent of the bank, had blocked nominees to the board over the past two years as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. In January the Alabama Republican moved from the Banking to chair the Rules Committee, removing one hurdle for giving Ex-Im a quorum.

Boeing and General Electric have argued that without the financing, they would face a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge against companies in Europe, Canada, Brazil, China and Russia, who don’t face similar restrictio­ns.

Finding credit elsewhere

With the bank hobbled, U.S. manufactur­ers have been forced to turn to private banks or export credit banks from other countries where they operate to help customers finance big-ticket purchases. Boeing has lost or faces delays on three commercial satellite sales because of the lack of export credit, said Kate Bernard, a spokeswoma­n for the Chicagobas­ed manufactur­er.

“It’s put us at a significan­t competitiv­e disadvanta­ge,” Bernard said.

Critics argue that the Ex-Im Bank’s guarantees are heavily weighted toward a few large companies and the U.S. government could potentiall­y be on the hook if borrowers default.

In 2014, 40 percent of all authorizat­ions went to Boeing alone, according to an analysis by George Mason University’s Mercatus Center. Other beneficiar­ies range from GE to Bechtel Group.

“I don’t blame companies like Boeing, Bechtel and GE for using Ex-Im or benefiting from Ex-Im,” said Diane Katz, a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, which favors limited government. “But we don’t have to give them the opportunit­y to do that on the backs of taxpayers.”

GE had contracts valued at $11 billion that required Ex-Im Bank financing in 2015, when reauthoriz­ation of the bank lapsed. The company rushed to form partnershi­ps with export credit agencies in Canada, the U.K., France and other countries to meet those needs, said Una Pulizzi, a spokeswoma­n for GE.

A representa­tive of Bechtel didn’t respond to a request for comment left outside normal business hours.

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