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Boeing posts quarterly loss as labor and supply strains overshadow increase in jet demand

Boeing's orders and deliveries rose last year as travel rebounded. Read more...

A Boeing 747-8F operated by AirBridgeCargo takes off from Leipzig/Halle Airport.

Jan Woitas | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

Boeing posted a $663 million loss in the fourth quarter as supply chain issues weighed on results despite a rebound in aircraft sales and deliveries that drove up revenue.

Airlines and aircraft manufacturers have benefitted from a sharp recovery in air travel, one of the most affected industries from the pandemic. But Boeing’s leaders have been hesitant to ramp up aircraft production until the supply chain has stabilized.

The company is producing 31 of its 737 jets a month and plans to increase that to about 50 per month in 2025 or 2026. It said it would increase what has been low production rate of the 787 Dreamliners to five each month toward the end of the year and to 10 per month in 2025 or 2026. Deliveries of those wide-body planes had been paused for around two years until this summer due to production flaws.

For the full year, Boeing lost $5 billion despite a 7% increase in revenue to $66.6 billion.

Here’s how Boeing performed in the fourth quarter compared with analysts’ estimates complied by Refinitiv:

  • Adjusted loss per share: $1.75 vs. expected earnings per share of 26 cents.
  • Revenue: $19.98 billion vs. $20.38 billion expected.

Boeing generated $3.1 billion in cash flow in the fourth quarter, higher than analyst forecasts, and $2.3 billion for the year, the most since 2018, before the second of two fatal 737 Max crashes that sparked a years-long crisis for the company.

Its commercial aircraft unit generated $9.2 billion in sales in the fourth quarter, up 94% from a year earlier as deliveries jumped, but it still produced a loss due to abnormal costs and other expenses such as research and development, the company said.

Boeing reiterated its expectation to generate between $3 billion and $5 billion in free cash flow this year.

“We’re proud of how we closed out 2022, and despite the hurdles in front of us, we’re confident in our path ahead,” CEO Dave Calhoun said in a memo to employees. “We have a robust pipeline of development programs, we’re innovating for the future and we’re increasing investments to prepare for our next generation of products.”

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