Boeing posts record annual loss and again delays new 777X jet

Editado por Ed Newman
2021-01-28 11:57:47

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Boeing said it expects the 777X, a larger version of the 777 mini-jumbo jet, to enter service by late 2023.  (Photo: David Ryder / Bloomberg)

Chicago, January 28 (RHC)-- Boeing Co posted a record $12 billion annual loss on Wednesday as it delayed its all-new 777X jet again and booked a $6.5bn charge for the program.  The coronavirus crisis has exacerbated a drop in demand for the industry’s largest jetliners, with airline customers shunning deliveries of planes due to international travel restrictions, hurting cash flow at the United States planemaker.

Boeing said it expects the 777X, a larger version of the 777 mini-jumbo, to enter service by late 2023, delaying the jet’s launch for the third time and booking a $6.5 billion pre-tax charge.  The company has been developing the widebody jet with the goal of releasing it in 2022, already two years later than planned.

A historic slump in air travel has also hurt shipments of Boeing’s 787 Dreamliners to airlines, causing the aircraft to pile up in dozens, and further weighing on the company that already has a stored inventory of about 450 737 MAX jets.

Boeing said it expects to resume the shipments of its wide-body 787 Dreamliners in 2021 as air travel recovers.  Deliveries of the 787s slumped nearly 70 percent to 53 planes in 2020 and are not expected to recover to 2019 levels until at least 2024, according to analysts.  Boeing also said it delivered an additional 13 737 MAX aeroplanes in January so far from its stored inventory, adding to the 27 aircraft it shipped in December after the US cleared the jet to fly again following a 20-month ban.

The company’s net loss rose to $8.44 billion in the fourth quarter ended December 31, from $1.01bn a year earlier, taking its full-year loss to a record $11.94 billion.  Revenue fell 15 percent to $15.30 billion in the quarter.

In a separate development, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) said on Wednesday that Boeing’s modified 737 MAX airliner is safe to return to service in Europe, lifting a 22-month flight ban after two crashes of the jet that caused 346 deaths.

EASA Executive Director Patrick Ky said it had “every confidence” that the plane was safe following an independent European review of changes ranging from cockpit software to maintenance checks and pilot training.



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