Boeing to cut 17,000 jobs amid ongoing employees' strike

In Top headlines
October 12, 2024
Boeing to cut 17,000 jobs amid ongoing employees' strike


A Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner taxis past the Final Assembly Building at Boeing South Carolina in North Charleston, South Carolina, United States, March 31, 2017. — Reuters

Renowned planemaker Boeing has said that it would lay off 17,000 employees — 10% of its global workforce — and will lay the first deliveries of its 777X jet by a year as it recorded $5 billion in losses in the third quarter as thousands of its workers continue their month-long strike.

Elaborating on the issue, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said: “We reset our workforce levels to align with our financial reality and to a more focused set of priorities. Over the coming months, we are planning to reduce the size of our total workforce by roughly 10%. These reductions will include executives, managers and employees.”

The top official’s statement comes as approximately 33,000 US West Coast workers have halted the production of the company’s 737 MAX, 767 and 777 jets as part of their ongoing strike.

With company shares falling by 1.1% in after-market trading earlier, the sweeping changes are a big move by Ortberg who arrived in August at the helm of the beleaguered planemaker promising to reset relations with the union and its employees.

Boeing recorded pre-tax earnings charges totalling $5 billion for its defence business and two commercial plane programs. On September 20, the planemaker ousted the head of its troubled space and defence unit Ted Colbert.

Boeing, which reports third-quarter earnings on October 23, said in a separate release it now expects revenue of $17.8 billion, a loss per share of $9.97, and a better-than-expected negative operating cash flow of $1.3 billion.

Analysts on average were expecting Boeing to generate a quarterly cash burn of negative $3.8 billion, according to LSEG data.

Thomas Hayes, equity manager at Great Hill Capital, said the layoffs could put pressure on employees to end the strike.

“Striking workers who temporarily do not have a paycheck do not want to become unemployed workers who permanently do not have a paycheck,” said Hayes in an email.

“I would estimate the strike will be resolved within a week as these workers do not want to find themselves in the next batch of 17,000 cuts,” he added.

Reaching a deal to end the work stoppage is critical for Boeing, which filed an unfair-labor-practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board on Wednesday accusing the machinists union of failing to bargain in good faith.

Ratings agency S&P estimated the strike is costing Boeing $1 billion a month and the company risks losing its prized investment-grade credit rating.

Ortberg also said Boeing has notified customers that it now expects the first delivery of its 777X in 2026 due to challenges in development, the flight-test pause and the work stoppage.

Boeing had already faced issues with the certification of the 777X that had significantly delayed the plane’s launch.

“While our business is facing near-term challenges, we are making important strategic decisions for our future and have a clear view of the work we must do to restore our company,” said the company’s CEO.

Boeing will end its 767 freighter program in 2027 when it completes and delivers the remaining 29 planes ordered but said production for the KC-46A Tanker will continue.

The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), the union representing striking workers, said in a statement that Boeing’s announcement regarding the 767 commercial freighter was troubling and that it would assess its implications.

IAM also described Boeing’s claims against the union with the National Labor Relations Board as groundless.

It said both those claims and the discontinuation of the 767 cargo plane seemed intended to distract from the group’s “failure to return to the negotiating table with their frontline workers”.

Jon Holden, President of IAM District 751, said in the statement Boeing’s attempt to bargain in the press “won’t work and it is detrimental to the bargaining process”.

He also said an unwillingness to negotiate would only prolong the strike.

Boeing said in light of the job cuts it would end a furlough program for salaried employees announced in September.

Even before the strike began on September 13, the company had been burning cash as it struggled to recover from a January mid-air panel blowout on a new plane that exposed weak safety protocols and spurred U.S. regulators to curb its production.

Boeing on Friday faced a court hearing in Texas in front of a judge who will decide whether to accept the planemaker’s offer to plead guilty to fraud under a deal with the Justice Department.

Boeing has agreed to pay up to a $487.2 million fine, spend at least $455 million on improving safety and face three years of court-supervised probation and independent oversight.

On the same day, a national watchdog said the Federal Aviation Administration was “not effective” in overseeing Boeing production.

Reuters reported this week Boeing is examining options to raise billions of dollars through a sale of stock and equity-like securities.

These options include selling common stock as well as securities such as mandatory convertible bonds and preferred equity, according to the sources. One of the sources said they suggested to Boeing that it should raise around $10 billion.

The company has about $60 billion in debt and posted operating cash flow losses of more than $7 billion for the first half of 2024.

Analysts estimate that Boeing would need to raise between $10 billion and $15 billion to maintain its ratings, which are now one notch above junk.

Michael Ashley Schulman, the partner at Running Point Capital Advisors, said the delayed 777X delivery and labour downsizing was not a major surprise.

“Their credit rating and share price has been at risk for the better part of a decade because of mismanagement and the stubbornness displayed in the strike may be the straw that breaks the camel’s back,” he said.