New 737 Max Turbulence Hits Boeing Ahead Of Earnings

 | Apr 23, 2021 02:00AM ET

Approaching Q1 earnings a year ago, Boeing (NYSE:BA) investors would have probably loved to hear that by this time, the 737 Max would be back in the air, airlines would be ordering more of that particular plane, and daily U.S. passenger numbers would be around 10 times their deepest Covid-related depths.

They probably would also have been pretty happy about a stock price near $250, up from lows near $150 going into Q1 2020 earnings. Shares are up around 66% over the last year, outpacing the S&P 500's 45% year-over-year climb (see chart below). The stock benefited from being grouped with the “reopening” trade that’s been in favor with many investors pretty much since vaccinations began last December. Analysts see earnings per share for BA in the red for Q1, but making progress from deeper Q1 losses a year ago.

Despite that list of victories, BA’s shares have been in a holding pattern recently, dogged in part by the continued slow recovery in air travel and also by another problem of BA’s own making: An electrical issue affecting dozens of 737 Max planes that caused a shutdown of those airliners a few weeks ago. Keep in mind that the company depends a lot on the success of the 737 Max to drive future growth.

BA’s earnings call on Wednesday, Apr. 28 could be a chance for investors to regroup after a whirlwind quarter for the company and get some additional insight into the new Max issue, how many planes it affects, and how long this pause in service for some of the Max fleet might last. You can be pretty sure this is the last sort of thing BA wanted to focus on now as it tries hard to put the long-term grounding of the entire Max fleet that ended in December squarely in the past.