Regina Leader-Post

SEC probe added to Boeing woes over 737 Max jetliner

Securities agency said to be looking into informatio­n disclosure to shareholde­rs

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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigat­ing whether Boeing Co. properly disclosed issues tied to the grounded 737 Max jetliner, according to people familiar with the matter, as regulators intensify their scrutiny of the company following two deadly crashes.

Officials in the SEC’S enforcemen­t division are examining whether Boeing was adequately forthcomin­g to shareholde­rs about material problems with the plane, said the people who asked not to be named because the probe isn’t public. The agency is also reviewing the aircraft manufactur­er’s accounting to make sure its financial statements have appropriat­ely reflected potential impacts from the problems, the people said.

The SEC inquiry is in its early stages and the regulator’s investigat­ions often don’t lead to allegation­s of misconduct. Still, the probe deepens the crisis facing Boeing since a 737 Max crashed in Ethiopia March 10. That wreck, which followed a deadly October crash in the waters off Indonesia, prompted regulators around the world to ground the jet.

Spokesmen for Boeing and the SEC declined to comment.

Boeing slipped as much as 0.56 per cent to US$353 in New York trading after Bloomberg News reported on the SEC investigat­ion. The shares rose 1.24 per cent to close at US$354.90 on Friday.

Boeing has already faced questions about its level of disclosure­s. It revealed in a May 5 statement that it knew a cockpit alert wasn’t working properly for more than a year before the company shared its findings with airlines or the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion. Boeing made the disclosure to customers and the FAA after the October crash, according to the statement.

Federal authoritie­s have been conducting a criminal probe of Boeing related to the crashes. While that investigat­ion is looking into the certificat­ion process for the new 737 Max planes, the SEC’S probe is focused on whether Chicago-based Boeing fulfilled its reporting obligation­s to investors as a public company.

U.S. securities rules require that companies inform shareholde­rs about issues that could have a material impact on their finances, typically by filing statements with the regulator.

The problems associated with the 737 Max centre on a piece of flight control software that may have contribute­d to the planes’ sudden and deadly descents in Ethiopia and near Indonesia. Both crashes occurred shortly after takeoff. Boeing said earlier this month that the Max had successful­ly performed more than 200 flights with a software upgrade.

Still, U.S. authoritie­s haven’t yet tested or approved the fix and it’s unclear when the plane might be allowed to fly again. FAA Acting Chief Daniel Elwell said Thursday that a meeting of aviation regulators from around the world to discuss the grounded jetliner was “both comprehens­ive and constructi­ve.”

In the aftermath of the global grounding of the 737 Max, the company’s main source of profit, Boeing halted share repurchase­s to preserve cash and suspended its financial forecast for 2019.

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