The National - News

Losses from Boeing 737 Max crisis to reflect in Q2

- NADA EL SAWY

Boeing will report an after-tax charge of $4.9 billion (Dh17.9bn) with its second-quarter results next week, in connection with its 737 Max crisis following two fatal crashes.

The loss is based on “potential concession­s and other considerat­ions to customers for disruption­s related to the 737 Max grounding and associated delivery delays,” Boeing said on Thursday.

“Nothing is more important to us than the safety of the flight crews and passengers who fly on our airplanes,” chief executive Dennis Muilenburg said.

“The Max grounding presents significan­t headwinds and the financial impact recognised this quarter reflects the current challenges and helps to address future financial risks,” it said.

The costs of the crisis have led to a $5.6bn reduction of revenue and pre-tax earnings in the quarter. The second-quarter results, due out on Wednesday, assume a gradual increase in the 737 production rate from 42 per month to 57 per month in 2020.

The company estimated that regulatory approval for the jet to fly again would begin early in the fourth quarter of this year, but acknowledg­ed the “actual timing of return to service could differ from this estimate”. US operators United Airlines, American Airlines and Southwest Airlines have removed the plane from their schedules until early November.

Global aviation regulators grounded the 737 Max after the jet was involved in two deadly crashes in October and March that killed 346 people in total. Boeing is fixing the flight-control software that caused the plane noses to lurch downwards.

The US Federal Aviation Administra­tion has said it will return the jet to service when it is confident all safety issues have been resolved. The country’s top transporta­tion official emphasised no date has been set.

“The FAA will lift the aircraft’s prohibitio­n order when it is deemed safe to do so,” Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao said on Thursday in Washington to the Air Line Pilots Associatio­n’s Air Safety Forum. “That is the bottom line: There is no timeline.”

Boeing also said this week it is dedicating $50 million of a previously announced $100m fund specifical­ly to families of the victims of the Lion Air Flight 610 from Indonesia and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 accidents.

It has hired attorney Kenneth Feinberg, who is an expert in overseeing victims’ compensati­on funds, including the US government’s 9/11 victim compensati­on fund and the BP oil spill fund. The $50m distribute­d in the “near-term” by Mr Feinberg and associate Camille Biros will be independen­t from any litigation, Boeing said.

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