Latest Boeing Earnings Fail To Trigger Stock Rebound

 | Oct 29, 2021 12:45AM ET

For the past three years, aviation and defense giant Boeing (NYSE:BA) has been on a long road to recovery after taking a severe blow to its credibility. The company’s latest earnings, released Wednesday, show that there are still many hurdles in the U.S. industrial giant’s way before it can claim to have overcome its problems.

Despite being buoyed by demand for its 737 MAX and cargo planes, Boeing told investors during its earnings call that it suffered a quarterly loss, mainly due to 787 Dreamliner production issues. And the news came despite Boeing having sold more jets than rival Airbus Group (PA:AIR) (OTC:EADSY) this year

The company’s adjusted loss of $0.60 a share and revenue of $15.3 billion both missed the averages estimates. Though the Chicago-based aircraft maker burned through much less cash than what Wall Street had expected, the figure got a big boost from a $1.3-billion tax refund during the quarter.

The biggest drag on the results came from a $185-million accounting charge for the latest delay to the Starliner spacecraft and $183 million in costs from disrupted production of the 787 Dreamliner. The plane-maker anticipates spending about $1 billion in total for troubles with the marquee wide-body jet.

Boeing Chief Executive Officer David Calhoun said in a statement:

"We are driving stability across our operations. Commercial market demand continues to gain traction with broad-based vaccine distribution and border protocols beginning to open. Going forward, supply chain capacity and global trade will be key drivers of our industry and the broader economy's recovery.”

Investors, however, are not yet convinced that the company will soon overcome its troubles, which started after the two deadly crashes of its flagship 737 MAX planes within the span of six months.

h2 BA Stock Continues To Underperform/h2

Despite a strong rebound from the market collapse in March 2020, BA shares are down 4% this year, massively underperforming the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has surged about 16% during this period. Closing yesterday at $207.79, BA is still more than 50% lower than the all-time high it reached in early 2019.