Boeing to cut 17,000 jobs as losses deepen during factory strike

To announce your selling 90 million shares in a long trailed announcement then the very next day announce you were increasing the amount of shares on offer to 112.5m. Can see why the markets reacted badly to that, 25% increase in the size of the share placing within 24 hours hardly inspires confidence.
 
To announce your selling 90 million shares in a long trailed announcement then the very next day announce you were increasing the amount of shares on offer to 112.5m. Can see why the markets reacted badly to that, 25% increase in the size of the share placing within 24 hours hardly inspires confidence.
Why yes, that would dilute earnings per share (EPS). Of course, and closer to hand, dilution also reduces the metric of negative EPS, also known to the non-financial rubes (i.e. unwashed investor masses) as losses.
 
"We’re disappointed our employees rejected an offer that featured 40% average wage growth and resolved their primary issue on alternative work schedules,” said a statement from Dan Gillian"

Not quite sure how a wage increase of between 20% and 40%* 'averages' out at 40%, perhaps he's using the mode or the median? Flight says Boeing had to drop their proposed alternative work schedules between the offers on the 22nd and the 31st, so that aspect isn't Boeing offering an improvement over current conditions, it's removing a Boeing attempt to worsen current conditions.


* This is why we had some reports last week saying 20% and others saying 40%. Offering some workers 20% when Seattle got 38% was never going to impress.

"Boeing says the deal would represent a 20% general wage increase, while IAM leadership has said the total package would deliver a 40% increase in total compensation for many workers."

 
Boeing is doomed. Apart from the design failures there’s another thing that strangely enough gets rarely mentioned: tariffs.

No non-American, western airline is going to buy Boeings for the next 25 years because of the tariffs, even though Boeing, for now, is excepted from tariffs. But we have seen that that could change at any given moment.

Airlines can’t risk buying an airplane, only to find out that when it gets delivered, it’s price has gone up by 10%, 20% or 100% because of tariffs. Airlines, and basically every company, can’t afford these kind of price increases and uncertainty.

It won’t be over when Trump is gone; it has turned out that with the current American political and judicial you’re always one election away from chaos and uncertainty.

So, with the exception of a few Gulf states and some other countries who own state owned airlines and who want to buy Boeings for political rather than commercial reasons, the large non American carriers will opt for Airbus (which appears to be the sensible thing to do anyway if you run an airline).

As an airline pilot with almost 20 years of experience almost exclusively on various Boeings, I’m very sorry to say Boeing is doomed.

No intention to start a political discussion, I’m just predicting/stating what will happen to Boeing from a commercial viewpoint.
 
My reaction when I heard of the latest outbreak of insanity:
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