BUSINESS

Boeing trims 787 jet output

October 23, 2019
(FILES) In this file photo taken on March 12, 2019 the Boeing logo is pictured at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington.  Boeing reported on October 23, 2019 a sharp drop in third-quarter earnings due to the 737 MAX grounding, but said it still expects regulatory approval this year to return the plane to service. The aviation giant, which has been in crisis mode following two MAX crashes that killed 346 people, said it
(FILES) In this file photo taken on March 12, 2019 the Boeing logo is pictured at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington. Boeing reported on October 23, 2019 a sharp drop in third-quarter earnings due to the 737 MAX grounding, but said it still expects regulatory approval this year to return the plane to service. The aviation giant, which has been in crisis mode following two MAX crashes that killed 346 people, said it "has assumed that regulatory approval of the 737 MAX return to service begins in the fourth quarter of 2019." / AFP / Jason Redmond



NEW YORK — Boeing cut its production plan for the 787 jet after receiving fewer orders than expected from China, which has been locked in a trade battle with Washington since last year, the company's chief executive said Wednesday.

The US-China trade situation "has presented challenges for our wide-body production plans," Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg said during a conference call with analysts.

The company announced Wednesday it would pare back production of the "Dreamliner" planes from 14 per month to 12 in late 2020.

"The lack of orders from China in the past couple of years has put pressure on the production rate," Muilenburg said.

The move came after the United States announced on Oct. 11 that it had reached "phase one" of a trade pact with Beijing, a de-escalation of a trade fight that has brewed for more than a year.

Muilenburg said the latest trade developments have been "productive" but that "we don't have firm orders from China at this point."

"We're going to continue to monitor and support the China trade discussions," he said.

"Those are still very important for the future. But for the purposes of our company, we have to be very disciplined in our production rate management and we're going to continue to do that."

The hit to Boeing orders is part of a larger pullback in US exports to China that has weighed on US manufacturing amid a global economic slowdown.

Boeing on Wednesday reported a 50.6 percent drop in third-quarter profits to $1.2 billion as the grounding of the 737 MAX continued to hit the bottom line. — AFP


October 23, 2019
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