The Borneo Post

Boeing’s sales fall as company delivers fewest jets since 2014

-

BOEING’S sales slumped as the US plane maker delivered the fewest jetliners in three years, ahead of the impending debut of a new version of the company’s best-selling plane.

Revenue fell 7.3 per cent to US$ 21 billion ( RM94.5 billion) in the first quarter, about US$ 200 million less than analysts had estimated. Weak sales overshadow­ed a surprise gain in free cash flow as the manufactur­er kept costs in check and started to reap a long- awaited payoff from the 787 Dreamliner.

The report spotlighte­d Boeing’s need to tamp down costs and make its factories more efficient as it girds for a slowing aerospace market.

While the Chicago-based manufactur­er raised its forecast for 2017 earnings because of improved tax expectatio­ns, it didn’t boost the cash outlook – a crucial number for investors as aircraft orders fade late in a sales cycle that began more than a decade ago.

“’ The stock has been a high flier for a while,” George Ferguson, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, said last Wednesday. “People clearly had high expectatio­ns and this was a middling report.”

The shares dipped 1.5 per cent to US$ 180.73 before the start of regular trading in New York. Boeing rose 18 per cent this year through last Tuesday, the third largest gain among the 30 members of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The manufactur­er plans to cut output of the 777, long its secondlarg­est source of profit, for a second time later this year.

The 787 Dreamliner should help dull some of the pain and Boeing will also gain as initial deliveries start next month for the 737 Max, the newest member of its most profitable jet family, Ferguson said.

Deferred production costs for the 787 fell US$ 316 million to US$ 27 billion from the previous quarter. The balance of deferred costs has started to shrink with each 787 that rolls out of Boeing’s factories. It represents the money the company sank into inventory and manpower after the Dreamliner entered the market three years late following a series of production and supply- chain breakdowns.

Boeing has promised a steep improvemen­t in cash and savings from the Dreamliner as it refines the plane’s manufactur­ing process, builds more highermarg­in models like the 787- 9 and no longer has to compensate customers for late deliveries. The marquee aircraft, with a frame made of spun carbon-fibre, emerged as a money maker for Boeing last year after a decade of losses.

First- quarter free cash flow of US$ 1.63 billion contrasted with the average analyst estimate that the planemaker would consume US$ 137 million during what’s typically the company’s slowest period.

Boeing delivered 169 commercial jets, the fewest since the first quarter of 2014, as it began to stockpile 737 Max jets ahead of the initial delivery of the upgraded narrow-body next month.

First- quarter earnings adjusted for pension expenses were US$ 2.01 a share, the company said Wednesday in statement. That compared to the US$ 1.91 average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

For the full year, the company forecast adjusted earnings of US$ 9.20 to US$ 9.40 a share, up from a previous estimate of US$ 9.10 to US$ 9.30, mainly because of a reduction in the expected tax rate.

“Although we don’t see investors giving Boeing much credit for a tax- driven EPS ‘ beat and raise,’ we would expect there to be a positive response to the solid cash-flow performanc­e in the first quarter, given historic seasonalit­y,” Robert Stallard, an aerospace analyst with Vertical Research Partners, said in a report to clients. —WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Boeing Dreamliner 787 planes sit on the production line at the company’s final assembly facility in North Charleston, South Carolina, on Dec 6, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Boeing Dreamliner 787 planes sit on the production line at the company’s final assembly facility in North Charleston, South Carolina, on Dec 6, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia