The Denver Post

Boeing is facing new upheaval after crash of Chinese airliner

- By Niraj Chokshi © The New York Times Co.

The crash of a Boeing jet in China on Monday is the latest crisis for the American plane manufactur­er, raising the prospect of renewed regulatory scrutiny and confrontin­g the company with another catastroph­e involving its planes.

It could be weeks or even months before investigat­ors identify what caused the Boeing 737-800 NG operated by China Eastern Airlines to plunge from the sky with more than 130 people aboard. But the outcome of the investigat­ion could weigh heavily on Boeing, which recently overcame years of troubles involving a newer variant of the single-aisle 737, the Max, and has had long delays in producing and delivering the twin-aisle 787 Dreamliner.

“I think it’s going to be very important to see what actually happened with this particular incident because there’s a credibilit­y concern,” said Rob Spingarn, a managing director at Melius Research, a financial analysis firm. “I think the investment community will pause to some extent on

Boeing until that informatio­n is out.”

Thousands of 737-800 NG planes have safely traversed the globe in recent decades, and many industry analysts and experts were disincline­d to conclude that Monday’s crash indicated any fundamenta­l design flaw. But Boeing’s stock fell 3.6% nonetheles­s. Shares of China Eastern ended 6.5% lower in trading in Hong Kong.

An icon of the aviation age, Boeing is the largest manufactur­ing exporter in the United States, a blue chip stock and a major employer. It is also one of the federal government’s biggest contractor­s.

Last year was its best for sales since 2018, with net orders of 535 planes. But it has endured repeated setbacks, including a $3.5 billion charge in the final three months of 2021 from the Dreamliner delays, driving the company to a $4.2 billion loss for the quarter.

In addition to its difficulti­es with the Max and the Dreamliner, two flagship planes, Boeing has had to contend with an industry slowdown resulting from the coronaviru­s pandemic. With air travel recovering only slowly to 2019 levels, airlines have cut back plans to buy new planes.

Boeing’s recent problems began with the Max, which was widely criticized after one of the planes crashed in Indonesia in late 2018 and a second crashed in Ethiopia in March 2019. All 346 people aboard the planes were killed, and the Max was grounded worldwide after the second crash.

Those disasters brought regulatory rebukes, several lawsuits, and billions of dollars in fines, settlement­s and lost orders. The United States approved the Max for flight again in late 2020, requiring Boeing make certain changes to the plane. That prompted similar approval from other countries, but regulators in China granted approval only in early December.

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