Boeing's US factory workers strike, halting 737 MAX production
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[September 13, 2024] By
Joe Brock and David Shepardson
SEATTLE (Reuters) -Boeing's U.S. West Coast factory workers walked off
the job early on Friday after overwhelmingly rejecting a contract deal,
halting production of the planemaker's strongest-selling jet as it
wrestles with severe output delays and heavy debt.
The workers' first strike since 2008 comes as the planemaker is under
heavy scrutiny from U.S. regulators and customers after a door panel
blew off a 737 MAX jet mid-air in January.
The mounting crises battered Boeing's stock and sparked a leadership
upheaval. Boeing shares fell 4% in U.S. pre-market trading on Friday.
The stock has fallen nearly 38% since the start of 2024.
New CEO Kelly Ortberg CEO Kelly Ortberg was brought in just weeks ago to
restore faith in the planemaker and had proposed a deal including a pay
rise of 25% over four years, far lower than the 40% workers had
demanded.
Roughly 30,000 International Association of Machinists and Aerospace
Workers (IAM) members who produce Boeing's 737 MAX and other jets in the
Seattle and Portland areas voted on their first full contract in 16
years, with 94.6% rejecting it and 96% favoring a strike in a two-part
ballot.
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"This is about respect, this is about addressing the past, and this is
about fighting for our future," said Jon Holden, who headed the
negotiations for Boeing's largest union, before announcing the vote
result on Thursday evening.
"We strike at midnight," said the union leader who had agreed to the
just-defeated deal, as members in the union hall cheered and chanted:
"Strike! Strike! Strike!"
BOEING, UNION KEEN TO GET BACK TO THE TABLE
A long strike could badly hit Boeing's finances, which are already
groaning due to a $60 billion debt pile.
"We remain committed to resetting our relationship with our employees
and the union, and we are ready to get back to the table to reach a new
agreement," the planemaker said in a statement on Thursday.
The proposed deal included a $3,000 signing bonus and a pledge to build
Boeing's next commercial jet in the Seattle area, provided the program
was launched within the four years of the contract.
"The key question now is on the duration of the strike given the gap
between the proposed wage increase and union members request," Jefferies
analyst Chloe Lemarie said in a note, adding that a long strike
represents a key risk for 737 MAX production levels.
Although IAM leadership recommended last Sunday that its members accept
the contract, many workers had responded angrily, arguing for the
original demand and lamenting the loss of an annual bonus.
"We're going to get back to the table as quickly as we can," Holden told
reporters, without saying how long he thought the strike would last or
when talks would resume. "This is something that we take one day at a
time, one week at a time.”
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Boeing factory workers hold signs as they wait to vote on their
first full contract in 16 years, at an International Association of
Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 751 union hall, in Renton,
Washington, U.S. September 12, 2024. REUTERS/David Ryder
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MULTIPLE CHALLENGES
A strike presents Boeing with multiple challenges: it will need to
decide how to respond at the bargaining table after saying it had
offered everything it could. It must also find a way to secure
factories full of valuable, part-built planes.
Workers have been protesting all week in Boeing factories in the
Seattle area that assemble Boeing's MAX, 777 and 767 jets.
Shortly after midnight, striking workers started to gather outside
the entrances of Boeing factories in the Seattle area. Many waved
placards that read: ‘On Strike Against Boeing', and drivers passing
by honked their car horns in support.
“I’m willing to strike for two months or even longer. Let’s go as
long as it takes to get what we deserve,” said James Mann, a
26-year-old who works in a wings division at Boeing.
If prolonged, a strike would also weigh on airlines that depend on
the planemaker’s jets and suppliers who manufacture parts and
components for its aircraft.
Air India CEO Campbell Wilson said on Friday that Boeing's 737 MAX
deliveries to his airline appeared to be "delayed a little bit" even
before the strike announcement because of regulatory scrutiny after
the Alaska Airlines door incident and supply chain issues affecting
the broader industry.
"There's nothing official yet, but I think the indication is, or the
expectation is that it's going to be a little bit later," he said in
an interview in Sydney.
According to a pre-vote note from TD Cowen, a 50-day strike could
cost Boeing $3 billion to $3.5 billion of cash flow.
The Boeing workers' last strike in 2008 shuttered plants for 52 days
and hit revenue by an estimated $100 million per day.
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S&P Global Ratings said that an extended strike could delay the
planemaker's recovery and hurt its overall rating. Both S&P and
Moody's rate Boeing one notch above junk status.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
(Reporting by Joe Brock in Seattle, David Shepardson in Washington
and Allison Lampert in Montreal; Additional reporting by Jamie Freed
in Sydney, Lisa Barrington, and Medha Singh in Bengaluru; Writing by
Jamie Freed, Peter Henderson and Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by Gerry
Doyle and Elaine Hardcastle)
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