Saturday, April 15, 2023

Boeing shares dive on latest 737 MAX issue


MM:

Boeing shares dive on latest 737 MAX issue





Boeing shares plunged more than seven per cent at session lows before finishing at US$201.71 (RM887.60), down 5.6 per cent. — Reuters pic

Saturday, 15 Apr 2023 8:18 AM MYT



NEW YORK, April 15 ― Shares of Boeing tumbled yesterday after the company disclosed a problem with a supplier part on the 737 MAX that is expected to slow deliveries of new jets.


Boeing was notified by supplier Spirit AeroSystem of the latest MAX issue, which affects a “significant” number of undelivered planes, but is not expected to ground those that have already been delivered, Boeing said.

Shares plunged more than seven per cent at session lows before finishing at US$201.71 (RM887.60), down 5.6 per cent.


The supplier told Boeing that “a non-standard manufacturing process” was used on two fittings on the fuselage on four 737 models, Boeing said, adding that the problem does not pose “an immediate safety of flight issue.”


“We have notified the Federal Aviation Administration of the issue and are working to conduct inspections and replace the nonconforming fittings where necessary,” Boeing said in an email.

“We expect lower near-term 737 MAX deliveries while this required work is completed.”

Boeing had previously projected deliveries of 400-450 737s in 2023, compared with 387 in 2022.

Spirit AeroSystems, a major supplier on the MAX, said it notified Boeing of a “quality issue” on the fuselage.

“We have processes in place to address these types of production issues upon identification, which we are following,” the company told AFP. “Spirit is working to develop an inspection and repair for the affected fuselages.”

Shares of Spirit plunged 20.7 per cent, while US carriers that fly the MAX also retreated in a sign that investors fear delayed deliveries could crimp capacity at a time of strong travel demand.

Southwest shares dropped 1.7 per cent, while United Airlines lost 0.7 per cent and American Airlines shed 1.2 per cent.

Boeing resumed deliveries of the MAX after the FAA cleared it to return to service in November 2020 following a 20-month global grounding after two deadly crashes.

However, production and quality control problems with the MAX and the 787 Dreamliner have hindered the company's ability to match its pre-pandemic momentum.

“For Boeing, it's kind of like a game of whack a mole,” said Michel Merluzeau, director of aerospace and defense analysis at AIR consultancy. “As soon as they solve one problem, another one appears.”

Merluzeau said he was hopeful that for planes already delivered, any fixes could be executed through the course of maintenance. ― AFP

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kt comments:

Don't trust the wankees - the MAX mistake has already killed hundreds

2 comments:

  1. "Don't trust the wankees" ....wakakaka....there is NO, repeat NO commercial aircraft in the world except for some patently unsafe Tupolevs, that doesn't fly with a heavy dose of Wankee technology.

    Even the Proud Tiongkok C919 would just be a dumb glider without Wankee engines and avionics.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wakakakaka…

      U sure of our farts?

      Have u checked the dependencies of the Yankee need/want necessities r truly self sufficient & sustainable?

      Ooop… too much faith in demoNcratic hyperboles!

      Delete