Boeing execs try to calm investors after
multi-billion dollar loss
Ranji Sinha
Wed, November 2,
2022 at 7:58 PM·3 min read
·
Dave Calhoun
American
businessperson and corporate director, President and CEO, The Boeing Company
Boeing posted a multi-billion dollar
loss in the third quarter of this year. Now, the company is trying to rebound
and move back into positive territory.
The plane manufacturer has thousands
of jobs based in Washington and the Puget Sound region. This morning, company
executives tried to sell investors on a new course for Boeing.
They discussed the plan during the
company’s investor conference Wednesday morning — it’s the first such
conference since 2016.
Boeing has faced production delays
and issues with certain contracts including defense contracts, and that has
spooked some investors who maybe are looking to see what, if anything, Boeing
can do to come out of this.
Boeing President and CEO Dave
Calhoun was the first in a long line of executives to speak this morning.
The executives fully admitted that
the COVID-19 pandemic and the grounding of its top-selling plane — the 737 MAX
— after two deadly crashes had created major issues. The company has racked up
debt and taken losses in some of its business sectors as a result.
Boeing executives said the company
will try to ramp up production in the coming years — production that waned due
to factory shutdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic. It also wants to get back to
a stable delivery timetable.
The company says it will deliver
400-450 737s next year and deliver about 70-80 787s. Company executives said
Boeing is hoping to get certification for the 737 MAX later this year or early
next year.
Calhoun stressed that safety now
dominates Boeing’s efforts.
He said the groundings and the
subsequent efforts toward building a safer 737 MAX have informed all decisions
going forward.
“We’ll never forget it nor should we
ever forget it, and all the work we do around safety, which has been the
dominant theme in our company during this whole period of time,” said Calhoun.
“All the work we do around safety is built around that promise.”
The company has stressed that its
free cash flow has been strong and executives this morning said that Boeing
believes there will be even higher free cash flow in the coming year.
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