Boeing (BA) Q2 2024 earnings

Boeing reports higher-than-expected loss and weaker revenue

Boeing said on Wednesday that the corporate would proceed to burn money this quarter, reporting a wider quarterly loss and lower revenue than analysts expected as each the group's industrial aircraft and defence programs continued to struggle.

Boeing also announced that it has hired Robert “Kelly” Ortberg, an industry veteran with greater than 30 years of experience within the aerospace industry, as its next CEO because the manufacturer seeks to regain its footing.

Boeing performed well in second quarter in comparison with the estimates compiled by LSEG:

  • Loss per share: $2.90 per share, adjusted, in comparison with $1.97 per share, adjusted
  • Revenue: 16.87 billion US dollars in comparison with 17.23 billion US dollars

“Despite a difficult quarter, we are making significant progress in strengthening our quality management system and positioning our company for the future,” CEO Dave Calhoun said in an earnings release on Wednesday. Calhoun announced in March that he would step down at the tip of the 12 months.

Boeing burned through $4.3 billion in money within the second quarter, and CFO Brian West said on the conference call that “we expect to see a different use of cash in the third quarter due to near-term working capital pressures.”

Boeing reported a second-quarter net lack of $1.44 billion, or $2.33 per share, compared with a lack of $149 million, or 25 cents per share, within the year-ago period. On an adjusted basis, the corporate reported a lack of $2.90 per share, nearly $1 per share below analysts' expectations, in accordance with LSEG.

Revenue for the three months ended June 30 fell 15% to $16.87 billion.

Boeing is attempting to stabilize its operations after a burst door plug on a virtually latest 737 Max earlier this 12 months renewed scrutiny from regulators and further delayed deliveries of recent, more fuel-efficient jets to airlines.

Boeing said Wednesday that it still plans to extend production of its Max planes to 38 per 30 days, up from about 200 per 30 days last quarter, in accordance with analysts.

The company's critical industrial aircraft division reported a 32% year-on-year decline in revenue to $6 billion.

Low deliveries and low production have caused a few of Boeing's financial targets to be pushed back.

West warned in May that the corporate would burn an analogous amount of money within the second quarter because it did in the primary, largely on account of lower-than-expected production and delivery rates.

The manufacturer said it burned $4.3 billion in money within the second quarter.

Other Boeing businesses are also battling cost overruns and delays. For example, the defense division, which builds the 2 Boeing 747 aircraft that can function Air Force One, is behind schedule.

The company's defense division reported a 2% decline in second-quarter revenue to $6.02 billion. The segment posted a lack of $913 million in the course of the period, nearly double the $527 million it lost in the identical quarter in 2023. Some of the losses “reflect higher estimated design and manufacturing costs and technical challenges,” Boeing said.

The company's shares rose greater than 3 percent in midday trading.

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