The Denver Post

Boeing to cut 7,000 more jobs as hopes for cash comeback fade

- By Julie Johnson

Boeing Co. is almost doubling its planned job cuts as the coronaviru­s pandemic and prolonged grounding of the 737 Max jet dim prospects for a financial recovery next year.

With the outlook for aircraft sales still uncertain, executives abandoned a forecast that Boeing would stop burning cash next year and said they would eliminate an additional 7,000 jobs. That will bring the expected loss from layoffs, retirement­s and attrition to 30,000 people by the end of 2021 — or 19% of the pre- pandemic workforce. Boeing announced a 10% cut earlier this year.

The planemaker is “taking tough but necessary action to adapt to the new market reality and transform our business to be sharper and more resilient for the long term,” Chief Executive Officer Dave Calhoun told analysts after the company reported earnings. “COVID- 19’ s continued impacts have had a more prolonged and deeper impact on our industry, and we’ll have to further reduce our workforce.”

Once a prodigious cash generator, Boeing is now carefully monitoring its liquidity and soaring debt while navigating the deep slump in air travel and working with regulators to lift the Max’s flying ban. Boeing has burned through about $ 22 billion in free cash since March 2019, when regulators grounded the company’s best- selling jet after two fatal accidents. The cash outflow will probably continue until 2022, said Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith.

Robert Stallard, an analyst at Vertical Research Partners, chopped his target price to $ 137 from $ 150, citing uncertainl­y around the company’s recovery.

“Boeing is essentiall­y a play on a coronaviru­s vaccine, increased testing and government lifting their travel restrictio­ns,” Stallard, who has a hold rating on Boeing, said in note to clients. “Even if there is progress on all these items, we would argue that there are better ways to invest in a future aerospace recovery than Boeing.”

The shares tumbled 4.6% to $ 148.14 at the close in New York amid a broad market rout. Boeing has plunged 55% this year, the biggest decline among the 30 members of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The Chicago- based company went through about $ 5 billion in free cash during the third quarter, in line with analyst estimates and about $ 620 million less than a quarter earlier. Boeing didn’t announce additional production cuts for its 787 and 737 Max, defying analyst expectatio­ns, but executives cautioned they may do so if the market deteriorat­es.

The manufactur­er reported an adjusted loss of $ 1.39 a share, better than the average shortfall of $ 2.08 expected by analysts. Sales dropped 29% to $ 14.1 billion. Wall Street had predicted $ 13.8 billion.

Meanwhile Boeing’s about 50 of its 787 Dreamliner­s and more than 450 of its Max jets in storage. The manufactur­er churned out the single- aisle 737 models during the grounding but can’t deliver them until regulators lift the flying ban.

The results didn’t contain any surprises, said Robert Spingarn, an analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG. “I don’t think people expected an epiphany — there’s not enough informatio­n. The situation just won’t get clearer until there’s a tangible solution of some type for the virus.”

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