The Oklahoman

Boeing CEO raises possibilit­y of pausing Max production

- By David Koenig AP Airlines Writer

DALLAS — Boeing's CEO says the company will consider temporaril­y shutting down production of the 737 Max if the plane's return is significan­tly delayed beyond the company's October forecast.

The comment by Chairman and CEO Dennis Muilenburg underscore­s the uncertaint­y swirling around the company and its best-selling plane, which has been grounded since March after two deadly crashes.

Boeing reported Wednesday that it suffered its biggest quarterly loss in at least two decades, nearly $3 billion, as it absorbed financial damage caused by the Max. Revenue plunged 35% after Boeing halted deliveries of any new Max jets.

The huge second-quarter loss was expected. Boeing removed much of the suspense from earnings day when it announced last week that it would take a $4.9 billion after-tax charge for the Max. The charge was calculated from Boeing's estimate of the cost of compensati­ng airlines for lost use of their Max planes for several months. It did not include Boeing's potential liability from dozens of lawsuits filed by relatives of the 346 passengers who died in the two crashes.

Boeing is updating U.S. and foreign regulators daily on its work to fix the plane. Based on those discussion­s, the company said last week that it expects the Max to resume flying early in the fourth quarter.

The Max assembly line near Seattle has stayed open, although at a reduced rate. The company even hopes to boost production gradually from the current 42 a month to 57 a month next year, but that assumes the plane will fly and Boeing will soon resume deliveries to airlines — jets have been piling up in Boeing lots since March.

“If that estimate of( an October) return to service substantia­lly changes, then we'll have to consider alternativ­es,” Muilenburg told analysts. “Those alternativ­es could include different production rates, they could include a temporary shutdown of the line.”

Muilenburg's comments implied that the Federal Aviation Administra­tion can review the company's changes to flight-control software in one month. The FAA already has been analyzing much of Boeing's work. An FAA spokesman said the agency has no preconceiv­ed timeline for returning the Max to service, and will do so only when it determines that the plane is safe.

The grounding of Boeing's plane has caused airlines, including American, United and Southwest, to cancel thousands of flights into early November. A pause in Max production would hit Boeing assembly workers and the company's suppliers, including engine maker General Electric.

Numbers affected

The Max saga already is dinging durable-goods orders and U.S. exports.

Orders for U.S. nondefense aircraft and parts fell 39.4% in the first five months of 2019, compared with the same period last year, according to Commerce Department figures. Exports of civilian aircraft fell 12% in that stretch, a drop of nearly $2.8 billion.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin weighed in on the importance of fixing the Max, which was designed to compete with a plane built by Europe's Airbus.

“There is no question this is very important to us,” he said on CNBC. “We compete, Boeing versus Airbus, every day.”

Chicago-based Boeing Co., which builds planes in Washington state and South Carolina, said it lost $2.94 billion

in the quarter, compared with a profit of $2.2 billion a year earlier. It reported an adjusted loss of $5.82 per share.

Revenue tumbled to $15.75 billion from $24.26 billion a year earlier.

The huge charge for the Max caused the quarterly numbers to mean less than usual. Some analysts excluded the charge from their forecast of earnings per share, while others did not, making it difficult if not impossible to judge whether Boeing met, beat or fell short of Wall Street expectatio­ns.

Boeing is working to complete changes in flight-control software on the 737 Max that was implicated in the fatal crashes. The company said it is testing the final software changes that it will submit to the FAA for approval.

Some relatives of passengers who died in the crashes — one off the coast of Indonesia in October, the other in Ethiopia in March — have urged Boeing and regulators to scrap the plane. They argue that flight-control software called MCAS is a bandage meant to cover a plane that was more prone to aerodynami­c stalls because of the larger size and forward position of its engines compared to previous Boeing 737s.

Among those calling for ditching the plane are longtime consumer crusader Ralph Nader, whose grand-niece died in the Ethiopia crash, and Paul Njoroge, a Canadian who told a congressio­nal panel this month about losing his wife, three children and mother-in-law on the same flight.

 ??  ?? A Boeing 737 MAX 8 airplane being built for India-based Jet Airways, top, lands following a test flight. [AP PHOTO]
A Boeing 737 MAX 8 airplane being built for India-based Jet Airways, top, lands following a test flight. [AP PHOTO]

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