Toronto Star

Boeing faces $5B for 737 Max training tab

Amount would nearly double amount firm promised for grounding

- MARY SCHLANGENS­TEIN

DALLAS— Boeing Co.’s costs would rise an estimated $5 billion if pilots need to get simulator training before flying the 737 Max, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

That would nearly double the $5.6 billion that Boeing had committed to cover costs from last year’s grounding of the jetliner. The manufactur­er will be expected to reimburse airline expenses for simulator training because it sold the plane on the basis that pilots certified for the previous 737 variant would need minimal additional training, analyst George Ferguson said in a note Thursday.

The manufactur­er on Tuesday said it had advised regulators that pilots need more than brief tablet-based training before flying the Max, reversing its previous stance in part because of revisions to the plane after two crashes killed 346 people.

Simulator training would delay the return of the aircraft, Ferguson said. The decision on simulators is up to regulators, who have yet to approve the plane’s return.

“Our estimates show the cost of airline lost profits will probably exceed Boeing’s $5.6 billion reserve just for 2019,” he said.

“As the production pause stretches on, suppliers will run into more financial difficulty, perhaps even needing support from Boeing.”

Boeing’s compensati­on to Southwest Airlines Co., the largest operator of the Max when it was grounded in March, likely will exceed $1.2 billion if the plane remains parked through this quarter, Ferguson estimated.

That would be 22 per cent of the $5.6 billion that the manufactur­er has set aside.

Southwest hasn’t disclosed terms of its agreement with Boeing but said the grounding reduced operating income by $830 million last year.

Using Southwest as a benchmark, Ferguson bases his estimates on 385 Max planes in fleets at the time of the grounding, plus an order backlog of 4,543 jets — all sold before regulators ordered the aircraft parked.

American Airlines Group Inc. and Grupo Aeromexico SAB also have reached confidenti­al agreements with Boeing.

Savanthi Syth, an analyst with Raymond James Financial, also has said Boeing likely would bear the costs of incrementa­l pilot training on the Max.

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