Here is the article.
Huge losses, a contentious labor strike, and stock sales to repair a bad balance sheet. There is a
lot for Boeing
investors to deal with these days.
Through it all, the stock has been remarkably stable. There
is a good reason for that.
First, a review of the bad news. Boeing reported a third-quarter loss of $6.2 billion, one of
the worst financial results in the company’s history. Results were preannounced
on Oct. 11
On Thursday, the stock fell 3.2% to $149.31, not too far from the roughly $151 level shares reached before the earnings preannouncement. They closed at $157 after the earnings were reported.
All that unfolded while some 33,000 workers in the Pacific
Northwest were on strike. The action began on Sept. 13 after union employees
rejected a deal that would have raised wages by about 25% over four years.
They rejected another deal that would have raised wages by
35%.
Shares were trading at about $163 before the strike. They
briefly traded above $163 on Oct 21.
Bernstein analyst Douglas Harned also downgraded Boeing on
Tuesday to Hold from Buy. His price target went to $169, down from $195. He
doesn’t have confidence the stock will outperform the market over the coming 12
months.
Boeing stock seems unaffected by all that troubling news.
The reason is fairly simple: It’s half a trillion dollars. That’s roughly the
value of Boeing’s backlog of orders for jets. Boeing can make money. It just
needs to make planes.
Boeing delivered 806 planes in 2018. Wall Street believes
Boeing can beat that number in 2028. Wall Street’s free cash flow estimate for
2028 is about $10 billion, according to FactSet.
The estimate hasn’t moved much over the past three months.
There has been no change in the long-term cash flow outlook and no change in
the stock price.
Free cash flow estimates started the year at about $14 billion. That was before an emergency door plug blew out of a 737 MAX 9 plane during a flight on Jan. 5. The incident led to slower production and more regulatory oversight. Boeing shares are down about 38% since then.
So the big question for investors is what is the direction of 2028 free cash flow? Will it be better or worse than $10 billion? That’s hard to say. It’s a long way off, but that answer will determine how the stock does in the coming year or two.
And yes, Boeing management and workers need to make peace before that. The workers make the planes.
No comments:
Post a Comment