| Boeing & Aerospace Business
 
 Losses piled up for Boeing in 2024
 
 Jan. 23, 2025 at 6:04 pm
 
 
 
  Boeing lost billions of dollars in 2024, with most divisions losing money. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)
 
 
   By
 Dominic Gates
 Seattle Times aerospace reporter
 
 
 How bad was 2024 for Boeing financially?
 
 On Thursday the  company announced fourth quarter details showing it lost last year about  $11.8 billion, the second heaviest loss in Boeing history.
 
 The  data released after the stock market closed Thursday also shows a fourth  quarter cash outflow of $3.5 billion, which means Boeing burned through  $13.7 billion in cash in 2024.
 
 Boeing attributed the financial  meltdown, which included $2.8 billion in fourth quarter write-offs, to  the lost revenue during the strike by Machinists in the fall and  the higher labor costs in the new contract Machinists won, as well as further delays on major defense programs.
 
 Still,  in a statement released with the worrying financial details, Boeing CEO  Kelly Ortberg, who took charge in August, spoke of the new Machinists  contract as a positive for the future.
 
 “Although we face near-term  challenges, we took important steps to stabilize our business during  the quarter including reaching an agreement with our IAM-represented  teammates,” he said “Our team remains focused on the hard work ahead to  build a new future for Boeing.”
 
 Big charges on 777X, 767 and military programsBoeing  said it will report a loss in the fourth quarter of $5.46 per share,  which analyst Scott Mikus of Melius Research calculated as equating to  an overall quarterly loss of about $3.8 billion. That’s significantly  worse than the consensus projections among Wall Street analysts of just  less than $1 billion.
 
 The overall 2024 loss is just less than the largest ever in 2020,  when a combination of the 737 MAX grounding and the global pandemic  paralyzing aviation caused an $11.9 billion loss.
 
 Boeing’s chaotic year began with 737 MAX deliveries halted after a large  fuselage panel on an Alaska Airlines flight blew out in midair. That drew sharp attention from the Federal Aviation Administration, which capped MAX production  until Boeing gets control of its safety and quality management.
 
 Production was only beginning to ramp up again when the Machinists struck in September. For the 53 days of the strike,  extending well into the fourth quarter, Boeing delivered only a few commercial airplanes.
 
 In  October, Boeing delivered just commercial 14 jets. Even in Boeing’s  North Charleston, S.C, plant, where the workforce was not on strike,  production of the 787 Dreamliner was slowed by shortages of parts from a  supply chain weakened since the pandemic.
 
 Boeing said its  Commercial Airplanes unit lost $2.1 billion in the fourth quarter. That  outcome reflects the reduced revenue due to lower jet deliveries during  the Machinists strike and higher labor costs in the final agreement,  Boeing said.
 
 It took a $900 million write-off on the 777X program  for the higher labor costs that “will be incurred over the next several  years,” and another $200 million write-off on the 767.
 
 Boeing’s Defense and Space unit lost $2.3 billion in the fourth  quarter. That reflected a total of $1.7 billion in write-offs on a  series of troubled fixed-cost programs for the Pentagon.
 
 The  largest defense write-off was $800 million on the KC-46 air-to-air  refueling tanker for the Air Force. That aircraft is a military  derivative of the 767 built in Everett. Boeing again attributed the  charge to the Machinists strike and final contract creating “higher  estimated manufacturing costs.”
 
 This brings total Boeing KC-46 tanker write-offs over the past decade to $9 billion.
 
 Boeing also took a $500 million charge on its T-7 jet  trainer and a further $400 million on three more troubled programs: the  commercial crew space vehicle; the MQ-25 aircraft carrier-based aerial  refueling drone for the Navy; and the Air Force One program, now likely  delayed until after President Donald Trump’s term is over.
 
 All of  those defense-side programs are far behind schedule and all are  money-losing. During 2024, Boeing’s defense and space unit wrote off a  total of $5 billion.
 
 In an interview, Ron Epstein, an analyst with  Bank of America, said he’s surprised at the constant stream of  defense-side cost overruns.
 
 “When does this defense stuff end?” Epstein asked. “How many times do you have to hear, we’ve accounted for it all?”
 
 Only Boeing’s aftermarket services division made money in the fourth quarter.
 
 This latest financial plunge comes after  Boeing wrote off $5 billion just three months ago as it reported a $6.2 billion loss for the third quarter, very little of which was due to the Machinists’ strike.
 
 Thanks to  $21 billion raised through a share sale in October, at least Boeing has lots of capital to help get through the current crisis.
 
 Its cash on hand, which was just $10.5 billion at the end of September, at the end of 2024 stood at $26.3 billion, Boeing said.
 
 Though  Boeing shares had gained $3.70 during trading Thursday, after the news  of the quarterly financial damage broke, shares lost most of that gain  in after-hours trading.
 
 Boeing’s release Thursday was a  preannouncement of the bad news. The company will provide more details  in its quarterly report Tuesday.
 
 Dominic Gates:       206-464-2963 or  dgates@seattletimes.com. Dominic Gates is a Pulitzer Prize-winning aerospace journalist for The Seattle Times.
 
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