Boeing shares jump 8% after smaller-than-expected loss

Aircraft maker aims to boost 737 MAX output to 38 a month this year, the company’s ‘turnaround year’

A Boeing 737 MAX 8 at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, the US, April 22 2025. Picture: REUTERS/DAVID RYDER
A Boeing 737 MAX 8 at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, the US, April 22 2025. Picture: REUTERS/DAVID RYDER

Montreal — Boeing reported a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss on Wednesday as the US plane maker produced and delivered more jets after quality problems and a crippling strike shuttered most of its aircraft production late last year.

The company’s shares jumped 8% in morning trading, as its loss was not as large as investors feared and after a gradual increase in 737 production during the quarter.

Boeing wants to roughly double output of its top-selling 737 MAX plane from its January level to a regulator-capped 38 a month by the end of this year.

CEO Kelly Ortberg, who took the helm of the plane maker last year promising to cautiously grow output, told CNBC that Boeing is producing 737s at a monthly rate in the low 30s.

Ortberg, who referred to 2025 as Boeing’s “turnaround year” in a letter to employees on Wednesday, said the company also hopes to conduct more flights of its troubled Starliner space programme this year.

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, left. Picture: MARIAN LOCKHART/BOEING/REUTERS
Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, left. Picture: MARIAN LOCKHART/BOEING/REUTERS

But Boeing faces industry supply-chain snags that have delayed some jet production even as plane makers’ backlogs swelled in 2024 on strong demand for aircraft. It reported an $11.8bn loss for 2024 due to problems at its major units.

Boeing is also dealing with the fallout of a US-China trade war that led to the return of two of its planes destined for a Chinese carrier and could further strain relations with the fast-growing aviation market.

“We do not see China as a major driver of Boeing’s recovery in the next few years but the reported inability to deliver there is another question, as is the possibility to remarket some of these aircraft,” JPMorgan analysts led by Seth Seifman wrote in a note.

Ortberg said Boeing may redirect to other customers planes that were planned for delivery to Chinese airlines this year, due to tariffs.

“We’re going to be pretty pragmatic with what we do here for those aeroplanes that haven’t been built yet,” Ortberg said. “There’s plenty of customers out there looking for the MAX aircraft.”

Free cash flow usage, a metric closely watched by investors, improved during the quarter to negative $2.3bn, beating analysts’ expectations of negative $3.6bn on average, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Boeing CFO Brian West said in March that cash flow could improve in the first quarter by hundreds of millions of dollars.

Ortberg reiterated a company target of positive free cash flow in the second half of the year as the company focuses on reducing debt and selling noncore assets.

On Tuesday, Boeing announced the sale of portions of its Digital Aviation Solutions business, including navigation unit Jeppesen, for $10.55bn.

The plane maker reported an adjusted loss of 49c per share during the first quarter, compared with $1.13 per share a year ago. Analysts were expecting the company to report an adjusted loss of $1.29 per share, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Vertical Research analyst Rob Stallard called the results “relatively boring” compared with other quarters.

“While burning through over $2bn in cash is hardly ‘good’, consensus had been expecting worse,” he said in a note to clients. “However, all eyes are on the future.”

Boeing’s defence unit returned to profitability after three consecutive quarters of losses, reporting operating earnings of $155m — up slightly from $151m a year earlier.

Reuters

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