Business Day

Boeing to ditch noncore assets

• Plane maker is shedding assets like King Midas in reverse ’, says aerospace analyst

- Julie Johnsson

Boeing is thinning its corps of vice-presidents and winnowing property holdings as the plane maker works furiously to counter plunging aircraft sales and mounting costs of the grounded 737 Max. Boeing is also wringing savings from investment­s in futuristic technology as well as its businesses and organisati­onal structure.

Boeing is thinning its corps of vice-presidents and winnowing its property holdings, including a splashy outpost near the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT), as it works furiously to counter plunging aircraft sales and mounting costs for the grounded 737 Max.

About 170 mid-level executives, 70 of them based at Boeing ’ s commercial plane division, are taking a buyout offer that includes a year’s salary, according to people familiar with the matter.

The first of the vice-presidents and senior managers to accept the terms will leave on October 2, followed by a second wave later in the year.

The cuts go deeper and wider than the 19,000 jobs pared earlier this year when the coronaviru­s pandemic sent air travel into an unpreceden­ted collapse. Stemming the cash outflow has become a paramount concern for Boeing, and the company is also wringing savings from investment­s in futuristic technology as well as its businesses and organisati­onal structure.

SHRINKING MARKET

Boeing is shedding assets “like King Midas in reverse”, said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace analyst with Teal Group.

The biggest and most controvers­ial of the cost-saving measures being considered by Boeing would be to build the 787 Dreamliner at a single site, most likely its South Carolina factory, and close a second final-assembly line in Everett, Washington.

The decision on production amid a steep plunge in widebody jet deliveries is expected to be announced as soon as October, according to two people, who asked not to be named because they were not authorised to speak publicly.

Boeing is also jettisonin­g holdovers from the days when it was flush with cash. One example: a lavish executive retreat, modelled after a French chateau, in the countrysid­e near St Louis. The Boeing Leadership Center is closing indefinite­ly, with 81

workers from chefs to waiters losing their jobs, according to a report in terms of the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notificati­on Act.

CEO Dave Calhoun and CFO Greg Smith warned in July that the company faced a shrinking market that is likely to remain depressed for years.

The Chicago-based company could see a staggering $23.3bn cash outflow this year, according to an estimate by Melius Research analyst Carter Copeland, before the resumption of Max deliveries starts to fill the company’s coffers in 2021.

Smith, who is orchestrat­ing the shake-up, said in August that Boeing needs to be “clear-eyed about the market” and how to mitigate its risks.

Boeing signalled in August that a new voluntary exit offer would take workforce reductions well beyond the 10% it initially targeted. The package was aimed at the commercial aircraft and services businesses, the most damaged by the pandemic, as well as the corporate operation, which employed 37,862 people at the start of the year.

Fewer employees in the company ’ s defence, space and government business were eligible for the buyouts.

Boeing is trimming R&D spending in part by phasing out Boeing NeXt, a two-year-old unit focused on futuristic concepts from flying cars to a supersonic business jet.

Aurora Flight Sciences,

among the highest profile of the ventures, remains a wholly owned subsidiary with work proceeding “full steam ahead”, a Boeing representa­tive said.

But the company has tapped the brakes on the Autonomous Flight Research Center it had planned to open this year near the MIT campus.

Boeing is trying to sublease about half of the space it had secured, said Peter Conway, director of research for Bostonbase­d Lincoln Property, which does not represent Boeing or the landlord.

Aurora no longer plans to move its Cambridge-based team to the building, Boeing said.

FUTURISTIC CONCEPTS

The company plans to decide by year end whether to maintain or monetise its stakes in three ventures: Aerion, which is developing a supersonic business jet; SkyGrid, which is making an air-traffic management system for drones; and Wisk, a joint venture with Kitty Hawk Corporatio­n, an autonomous flight venture backed by Google founder Larry Page.

“It ’ s a different world now,” said Stephen Perry, an investment banker who specialise­s in aerospace and defence deals at Janes Capital Partners. “They ’ re all cash-draining businesses in the short run, with an uncertain future.” Boeing, Perry said, needs to focus on its core businesses because it’s in a fight for survival

 ?? Reuters/File ?? Grounded 737 Max aircraft at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington. Max deliveries are expected to resume in 2021 after two devastatin­g crashes led to worldwide groundings. /
Still on hold:
Reuters/File Grounded 737 Max aircraft at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington. Max deliveries are expected to resume in 2021 after two devastatin­g crashes led to worldwide groundings. / Still on hold:

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