The nose cone of a Boeing 787 being displayed on the tarmac during the Paris Air Show at Le Bourget Airport, outside Paris, June 25, 2023.
Nicolas Economou | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Boeing slashed its quarterly losses as sales jumped after it delivered the most airplanes since 2018, the clearest sign yet of improvement at the manufacturer that has swung from crisis to crisis for years.
Here’s how Boeing performed in the second quarter, compared with estimates compiled by LSEG:
- Loss per share: $1.24 adjusted vs a loss of $1.48 expected
- Revenue: $22.75 billion vs $21.84 billion expected
The aerospace giant lost $176 million in the three months ended June 30, down from $1.09 billion a year earlier. Revenue rose 35% to $22.75 billion from $16.87 billion last year. Adjusting for one-time items, Boeing reported a loss of $433 million or $1.24 a share, better than the loss analysts expected.
“Change takes time, but we’re starting to see a difference in our performance across the business,” CEO Kelly Ortberg said in a note to staff outlining improvements across Boeing’s businesses.
“If we continue to tackle the important work ahead of us and focus on safety, quality and stability, we can navigate the dynamic global environment and make 2025 our turnaround year,” he said.
Boeing has been getting better by many metrics under Ortberg, a former aerospace executive and an engineer who took the top job last August. Its airplane deliveries have improved, its production has become more stable and even once-critical airline CEOs have praised Boeing’s leadership.
For the three months ended June 30, Boeing handed over 150 airplanes. The last time it delivered that many planes in a second quarter was in 2018, which was also the last year Boeing posted an annual profit.
The company still has challenges ahead. Boeing said Tuesday that the long-delayed certification of the Boeing 737 Max 7 and the Max 10, the smallest and largest members, respectively, of the Max family, likely won’t come this year as Ortberg forecast in May.
Also, Boeing’s defense unit has been riddled by charges in past quarters and, as of Sunday, could face a factory worker strike after employees voted down a new labor deal.
Investors will look to Ortberg and the executive team on a 10:30 a.m. call on Tuesday for their outlook on further improved production, results and stability at a company that has been mired in crises since 2018, when the first of two deadly 737 Max crashes occurred.
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