Boeing's $14 billion
Singapore Air order does not fill 777, 787 gap: CEO
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[February 10, 2017]
By Alwyn Scott
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Boeing Co must sell more 777 and 787 jetliners to keep
production plans on track, despite a $13.8 billion order that landed
earlier on Thursday, its chief executive said.
The order from high-profile customer Singapore Airlines is a strong
endorsement of both planes, and could lift sales in a sluggish market if
other carriers follow Singapore Air's lead, analysts said.
But the win over rival Airbus <AIR.PA> did not lessen two big risks
Boeing faces, Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg said on Thursday
at a conference in New York hosted by Cowen and Co.
Sales of Boeing's highly profitable 777s have slowed so much that Boeing
is cutting production 40 percent this year to cope as it begins
switching to the successor 777X model that Singapore Airlines ordered.
"When I take a look at risk areas, filling out the 777 bridge is the
area that we're focused on," Muilenburg said, referring to the
production spanning the two models.
Boeing also must sell more 787s so it can proceed with plans to lift
output to 14 planes a month from 12 in the next few years, Muilenburg
said.
That increase has looked iffy and some investors have worried Boeing
would abandon it. Muilenburg said Boeing still plans to lift 787 output
and currently does not envision a scenario that would require cutting
787 output below 12 a month.
Boeing shares were up 0.4 percent at $164.42 in afternoon trading.
The Singapore Airlines order is a boost for the 787 assembly line, but
it does not help with slow 777 sales, since the order is for the newer
777X model.
Muilenburg said the airplane market is still "very healthy" with
passenger traffic growing 5 percent to 6 percent a year, well ahead of
GDP rates.
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Dennis Muilenburg, CEO of The Boeing Company, speaks to members of
the press at Trump Tower in New York City, U.S. January 17, 2017.
REUTERS/Stephanie Keith
But
airlines have deferred delivery of about 2 percent of Boeing's backlog, double
the figure Muilenburg cited in July, though well below historical averages.
Boeing
has already cut 777 output to 7 planes a month from 8.3, and will trim it to 5 a
month in August. Deliveries - which generate the bulk of airline payments - will
actually fall to about 3.5 a month as Boeing builds 777X test planes in the next
few years, he said.
Even with those reductions, Boeing has to sell a few more 777s to fill out
production this year and has 10 percent of production unsold in 2018 and 2019.
Those figures include the planned sale of 80 planes to Iran, including 15 Boeing
777s, Muilenburg said.
Muilenburg voiced confidence that the Iran sale would go through despite the
potential political and bureaucratic hurdles.
"These are airplanes that support American manufacturing jobs," he said. "The
economic value to the U.S. is real."
He also saw prospects for more U.S. defense sales, noting "re-emerging strength"
in the defense budget. And, he said Boeing's KC-46 aerial tanker for the U.S.
Air Force, which has incurred about $2.4 billion in cost overruns, is expected
to begin generating positive cash flow next year.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Tom Brown and Leslie Adler)
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