|   |    Boeing’s 777 ‘gliders’ signal more cash woes           April 8, 2024 at 2:52 pm             
   Two  fuselage sections of a 777 freighter at the Boeing production facility  in Everett. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times, 2022) 
  By                         Julie Johnsson                      Bloomberg             Boeing likely didn’t deliver any 777 freighters during the first  quarter, adding to its cash woes at a time when 737 MAX handovers are  sluggish amid heightened government scrutiny.
  The planemaker as of  last week had 11 newly built “gliders” — an industry term for finished  aircraft that are lacking engines — stashed in and around its factory in  Everett, Jefferies analyst Sheila Kahyaoglu said in an April 5 report  citing data from Aero Analysis Partners/AIR. 
  The cash-flow drag  from 11 newly built but undelivered 777 freighters would translate to  roughly $1.16 billion, according to George Ferguson, analyst with  Bloomberg Intelligence. He estimates each aircraft not delivered  represents a cash outflow of about $105 million.
  The bottleneck  highlights how Boeing’s manufacturing challenges extend beyond its  cash-cow 737 MAX jet. The aerospace giant is working to bring its  factories and supply chain back to a steady cadence under scrutiny from  U.S. regulators following a series of quality lapses. 
  Boeing and  the 777 freighter’s engine manufacturer, General Electric, declined to  discuss specific details around the delivery hiccup. 
  “As the  aviation industry continues to manage through supply chain constraints,  we are working closely with our suppliers and customers on the timing of  their deliveries,” Boeing said.
   More on Alaska Airlines and the Boeing 737 MAX 9     A GE spokesperson said the company is coordinating GE90 engine  production and delivery schedules with Boeing and airline customers. 
  Like  Boeing and Airbus, jet-engine manufacturers are also grappling with  labor turnover and parts shortages that have persisted since the  pandemic eased. GE executives in early March said about 80% of its  delivery shortfalls were tied to constraints at suppliers.
  Six 777  freighters were built in March but not delivered, Kahyaoglu said, after  the planemaker handed over none to customers during the first two  months of this year.
  Cirium, which tracks aircraft production,  shows that only one of Boeing’s largest cargo-hauling planes took its  first factory flight during the quarter. The freighter, ordered by  Taiwan’s EVA Air, lumbered into the skies on March 27. Other airlines  waiting for the aircraft include Air China Cargo, Qatar Airways and  Lufthansa Cargo.
  The freighter for Eva Air took off from Paine Field headed to Taiwan at 2:17 p.m. Monday, the first 777 delivery this year. 
  Boeing  is expected to reveal the lack of 777 deliveries on Tuesday, when it  announces its orders and deliveries total for March. Airbus also reports  its own tallies for the month that same day. 
  Boeing will likely report that it delivered 30 jets in March, including 24 of its 737 MAX aircraft, Kahyaoglu said.
  With assistance from Kiel Porter
      This story was originally published at bloomberg.com.  Read it here.
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