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Boeing Sticks to 2022 Cash Flow Forecast, Prepares for Dreamliner Deliveries to Resume

Lindsey Wasson | Reuters
  • Boeing and Airbus customers are enjoying a rebound in air travel.
  • Supply chain and labor constraints are headwinds for both manufacturers.
  • Boeing delivered 121 aircraft in the quarter, most of them 737s, and said it's in "final stages" of resuming Dreamliner deliveries.

Boeing on Wednesday stuck by its forecast to return to free cash flow this year as it prepares to resume deliveries of its 787 Dreamliner planes after manufacturing flaws paused deliveries for much of the past two years.

The company's second-quarter results fell short of analysts estimates. Weakness in its defense unit dragged down results, but was partly offset by strength in its commercial airplane unit. Aircraft deliveries rose to 121 in the second quarter from 79 a year ago, while commercial aircraft revenue climbed 3% to more than $6.2 billion.

The company is fresh from winning high-profile orders at the Farnborough Airshow in the U.K. like those for 100 737 Max 10s from Delta Air Lines. Boeing and rival Airbus' customers have been benefiting from a rebound in travel after demand for flights slumped during the Covid pandemic.

Boeing swung to operating cash flow of $81 million in the quarter after burning $483 million in the same period last year. The Arlington, Virginia-based company posted net income of $160 million, down 72% from a year earlier on revenue of $16.68 billion, which was down 2% from the second quarter of 2021.

CEO Dave Calhoun earlier this month said the company is producing an average of 31 737 Max jetliners each month. He said Boeing won't raise production too quickly because of supply chain and labor constraints. Rival Airbus has expressed similar concerns.

"Even with demand high, we won't chase production rates or push our system too fast," Calhoun said in a staff note Wednesday. "With safety and quality at the forefront, we will prioritize stability and predictability." He highlighted supply constraints at engine makers during a quarterly earnings call Wednesday with analysts.

Calhoun also reiterated that Boeing is "in the final stages" of preparations to resume deliveries of its wide-body 787 Dreamliners, which have been paused for more than a year because of production flaws.

In January, Boeing said the issues would cost it $5.5 billion, including $2 billion in irregular manufacturing costs as it dialed back production to avoid a pileup of inventory. The company recorded $283 million of that in the second quarter.

A return of 787 deliveries is key for Boeing because customers pay the bulk of an aircraft's price when they receive the planes, though the company warned it will likely have to compensate airlines for the delivery delays.

On the call with analysts, Boeing's CEO said the company is working toward getting its Max 7 and Max 10 models, the smallest and largest in the family, respectively, certified by the FAA by the end of the year. Delays without exemptions could force Boeing to add new cockpit alerting systems under legislation that tightened aircraft certification requirements after fatal crashes of the Max in 2018 and 2019.

Regulators around the world grounded the planes after the second crash. The aircraft began returning to service in late 2020 though China still hasn't signed off on allowing it to fly there.

Boeing ended the quarter with 290 undelivered Max planes and about half of them are for customers in China, CFO Brian West said during the analyst call. Max deliveries this year will be in the low 400s, below the roughly 500 the company forecast earlier this year.

"Given this uncertainty with our customers in China, we now expect more deliveries of airplanes from inventory to shift into 2024," West said.

Here's how the company performed compared with analysts' estimates complied by Refinitiv:

  • Adjusted loss per share: 37 cents vs an expected loss 14 cents.
  • Revenue: $16.68 billion vs. $17.57 billion expected.

The company's defense unit revenue dropped 10% from a year ago and Boeing took a $147 million charge on its MQ-25 unmanned refueler because of higher costs.

The company also took a $93 million charge for its Starliner astronaut capsule, which brings the program's overrun costs to $688 million to date. Boeing successfully completed the second uncrewed Starliner flight test in May, and is now preparing for its first launch with astronauts next.

Boeing shares are down more than 22% so far this year through Tuesday's close. The stock was down 0.2% in afternoon trading Wednesday, giving up earlier gains.

 — CNBC's Michael Sheetz and Ian Krietzberg contributed to this report.

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