Los Angeles Times

Boeing prof its fall short

Shares rise slightly, reflecting relief the results weren’t worse.

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Shares rise slightly, up 0.4%, ref lecting relief that the results weren’t worse.

“How did this happen?” That question, posed by analyst Ron Epstein during Boeing Co.’ s earnings call Wednesday, lies at the heart of a crisis of confidence in the plane maker after two fatal crashes of its 737 Max jetliners in five months.

The most valuable U. S. industrial company is reviewing its operations and working to convince regulators, airlines and consumers that the bestsellin­g jet in Boeing history is safe to f ly. The manufactur­er abandoned its 2019 financial forecast as it deals with the Max’s grounding, which began six weeks ago after an Ethiopian Airlines jetliner went down minutes after takeoff.

With Boeing enmeshed in one of the biggest crises in its century- long history, earnings missed analysts’ estimates for just the second time in f ive years. The company has also temporaril­y halted repurchase­s as it seeks to preserve cash and the 737’ s production system. The accident in Ethiopia and an October disaster in Indonesia killed everyone on board — a total of 346 people.

“All of us at Boeing had been deeply affected by the accidents in Indonesia and Ethiopia, beyond anything I can recall in my 34 years with this great company,” Boeing Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg said at the outset of Wednesday’s call.

Boeing shares ended the day up 0.4% at $ 375.46. Investors probably were breathing a sigh of relief that the results weren’t worse, said Ken Herbert, an analyst at Canaccord Genuity. Through Tuesday’s close, Boeing shares had fallen 11% since the crash in Ethiopia, the biggest drop in the Dow Jones industrial average.

Boeing delivered 50 fewer 737s than planned because of the grounding, while its profit margins reflected a $ 1billion cost resulting from a cut in output of the narrowbody jets. Boeing also booked charges to revise training for pilots and update the Max’s software, which has been linked to both disasters.

Adjusted earnings fell to $ 3.16 a share, Boeing said in a statement. That was 9 cents less than the average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales slipped 2% to $ 22.9 billion, in line with expectatio­ns. Cash squeeze

The worst of the Max- related squeeze lies ahead for Boeing as it waits out regulatory scrutiny of the aircraft while trying to allay pilots’, airlines’ and consumers’ fears.

Each month the Max is grounded at the current production tempo will siphon $ 1.5 billion from Boeing’s previous guidance of wringing $ 17 billion to $ 17.5 billion in cash from its sprawling businesses in 2019, Seth Seifman, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a note to clients.

Boeing’s cash from operations would probably only break even in the second quarter if Max deliveries don’t resume, he said.

Epstein, an analyst at Bank of America Corp., spoke for many when he asked how the software f law in a stall- prevention feature known as MCAS slipped by Boeing’s engineers and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. The U. S. agency certified the 737 Max 8 for f light two years ago.

Muilenburg declined to share details, citing internatio­nal protocol for accident investigat­ions.

“But there was no surprise or gap or unknown here or something that somehow slipped through a certificat­ion process — quite the opposite,” the CEO said. “We know exactly how the airplane was designed. We know exactly how it was certified.”

That knowledge is ref lected in redesigned software that Boeing is expected to submit to the FAA soon, he said. The company will also need to persuade regulators from 50 countries to recertify the plane.

“We’re very confident that when the f leet comes back up, the Max will be one of the safest airplanes ever to f ly,” Muilenburg said.

While the Max’s indefinite grounding drags on, Boeing’s management team is focusing on conserving cash and tamping down costs. The company has set up a war room to monitor the crisis, recruiting people from across Boeing to manage the many threads of the situation, Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith said Wednesday.

The company has temporaril­y slowed its 737 final assembly line by 19% to build only 42 planes a month, the f irst such factory slowdown since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks disrupted air travel.

The rate cut was abrupt — such moves are typically f lagged a year in advance. Blunting the blow somewhat, Boeing is picking up the bill as suppliers such as Spirit AeroSystem­s Holdings Inc. continue work at the previous production pace of 52 planes a month.

The changes to 737 production didn’t take effect until mid- April, so the full effect on cash and profit will f irst be ref lected in secondquar­ter earnings. But under Boeing’s program accounting, a $ 1- billion effect was included in first- quarter profit margins for the jetliner division. Max unknowns

Robust sales at the defense and services divisions helped Boeing withstand the pressure from the Max grounding, as did a production increase for the 787 Dreamliner. Still, there’s a risk that investors will lose patience if regulators are slow to allow f lights of the 737 Max, a key source of cash for Boeing.

“There is still a lot that we don’t know about the Max situation,” Rob Stallard of Vertical Research Partners said in a note to clients after the conference call.

“Until we get more clarity, we could see the shares stuck in a holding pattern.”

 ?? Joe Raedle Getty I mages ?? CRASHES of Boeing 737 Max jets in Ethiopia and Indonesia that killed 346 people have plunged the company into a serious crisis.
Joe Raedle Getty I mages CRASHES of Boeing 737 Max jets in Ethiopia and Indonesia that killed 346 people have plunged the company into a serious crisis.

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