After years of stumbles and weak results, Boeing said Wednesday it expects to return at mid-decade to operational health and a more robust financial performance.
The aerospace giant—which has reported losses the last three years—guided investors to 2025-26 as the timeframe when they should expect a strong financial performance resembling those the company posted prior to the 737 MAX and COVID-19 crises.
Investors cheered the outlook, sending shares up nearly six percent at one point as Boeing signaled a more normal level of production and plane deliveries within the foreseeable future.
“We are on the right path to return to the operational and financial strength we expect of ourselves,” said Chief Executive Dave Calhoun at the outset of the company’s first investor day since 2016.
Boeing’s difficult period began in October 2018 with a deadly Lion Air crash of the 737 MAX, the first of two fatal crashes of the plane that together claimed nearly 350 lives and led to a global grounding of more than a year and a half.
The company’s problems mushroomed when the coronavirus pandemic decimated global travel beginning in 2020.
Demand has recovered strongly and the MAX has been cleared for service by most leading regulators.
But Boeing has struggled to fully exploit the improving environment due in part to supply chain problems and heavier scrutiny from US air safety regulators. These issues have forced the company to curtail production and delayed the certification of new aircraft.
The forecast released Wednesday includes a gradual improvement in Boeing plane deliveries and production in 2023 and 2024 and hitting its stride after that, boosting revenues.
The company projected free cash flow, a closely-watched benchmark of financial health, rising in 2023 to $3-$5 billion from the $1.5-$2 billion range in 2022.
It said free cash flow will surge to around $10 billion in 2024 and 2026, much closer to the $13.6 billion Boeing notched in 2018.
Shares rose 3.2 percent to $148.01 in early-afternoon trading.
© 2022 AFP
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After lengthy slump, Boeing outlines path to comeback (2022, November 2)
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