Boeing wins zero new orders,
delivers few jets and sees 737 MAX backlog shrink
October
brought no relief for Boeing’s commercial airplane business. It won zero new
sales, had to remove an additional 37 MAXs from the order backlog and delivered
just 13 jets.
Boeing’s struggles in October contrast sharply with a
surge in jet deliveries and a small uptick in orders at rival
Airbus.
Airbus
won 11 new orders and delivered a total of 72 aircraft in October.
Even
with approval for the 737 MAX to fly again expected by year’s end, the order
book for that plane continues to shrink.
Boeing
outright canceled a dozen orders for 737 MAXs last month. It also removed an
additional 25 of those aircraft from the official backlog as no longer certain
to be fulfilled.
Such
removals from the order book are required by accounting standards when either
the credit quality of an airline has lowered to a point where it may no longer
be able to pay for the jets, or because the delay in delivering the airplane,
under the terms of the contract, makes a cancellation possible.
So far
this year, Boeing has removed 595 now-dubious MAX orders from the backlog and
outright canceled a further 448, for a total order reduction of 1,043
MAXS.
As a
result, the 737 MAX backlog as of Oct. 30 fell to 3,320 jets.
The
backlog for Airbus’ rival A320neo family is 5,956 jets.
Boeing’s net order tally for the year, after all the
MAX subtractions, is negative 1,020 airplanes. Airbus’s net order total for the
year is 308 aircraft.
Boeing’s overall order backlog for all models is 4,275
airplanes. The Airbus total backlog is 7,377 airplanes.
Inventory swells, deliveries stall
The
pandemic has forced a huge drop in demand for airplanes, and international
travel restrictions are hampering some of the few airlines willing to pick up a
jet.
In
addition, Boeing deliveries continue to be slowed by the need for inspections
and rework on 787 Dreamliners following discovery of quality defects in the aft
fuselage section built in North Charleston, South Carolina.
On the
quarterly earnings call at the end of last month, Chief Financial Officer and
Executive Vice President Greg Smith said delivery of the “large number of
undelivered 787 aircraft in inventory … has been and is expected to remain
relatively slow” because of the inspections and rework.
As for
the 737 MAX, Boeing hasn’t been able to deliver any since the jet was grounded
in March 2019.
Boeing’s October deliveries included six widebody
freighter jets — one 747, two 767s and three 777s — plus a 767 tanker that will
be modified into a KC-46 for the Air Force and a P-8 anti-submarine 737 for the
Navy.
It
delivered just five passenger jets last month: a large 777-300ER bought by
Dubai-based lessor Novus Capital and destined for British Airways, and four
midsize 787s, which went to American Airlines, Irish lessor AerCap, Saudi
Arabian Airlines and Etihad of Abu Dhabi.
Airbus
deliveries included 55 single-aisle passenger jets: 12 A220s (the former
Bombardier CSeries aircraft) and 43 A320 family jets.
The
European jet maker also delivered 17 widebody passenger jets: four midsize
A330s, 12 large A350s and one A380 superjumbo jet.
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