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Here's What Boeing's Big News Means for Investors

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There has been some interesting and mixed news flow around  Boeing (NYSE: BA) recently. While what is being reported about the aerospace giant isn't coming from official sources at the aerospace giant, the assertions still come from credible sources, and they touch on key company objectives.

To summarize the three main narratives:

  • A Reuters article cited a White House official who stated that deliveries of the two Boeing VC-25B planes that will serve as the next "Air Force One" could be delayed until 2029, after Boeing's previous delays pushed the delivery dates into 2027 or 2028.

  • A Bloomberg article claimed that key airline customer Emirates now expects that deliveries of the 205 Boeing 777X widebody jets it ordered won't begin to take place any sooner than the second quarter of 2027, and possibly won't start until 2028.

  • Safran CEO Olivier Andries made public statements expressing confidence that Boeing will hit a delivery rate of 38 a month on the 737 MAX in the first half of 2025 and 42 a month by the end of the year.

All of these issues are connected to things that Boeing will need to do if it's going to convince investors that it's back on the right track. Unfortunately, the first two narratives cast some doubt on that premise.

Air Force One delays

The Air Force One program is one of four highly problematic fixed-price development programs at Boeing Defense, Space & Security (BDS). The others are the KC-46 refueling tanker, T-7 training aircraft, and the MQ-25 refueling drone.

While these programs only account for 15% of BDS revenue, they have generated multibillion-dollar losses and charges over the last few years. The Air Force One news is unfavorable, but if Boeing had to choose which of these four programs it was going to face delays on, it would probably be that one, because the potential longer-term demand for the other types of aircraft in development is greater.

An investor at a desk.
Image source: Getty Images.

Boeing 777X timeline

On Boeing's latest earnings call at the end of January, CFO Brian West confirmed that flight testing had resumed on the 777X and said that "we still expect the first delivery in 2026." Unfortunately, the commentary from someone close to the people doing the planning at Emirates offers a reason to doubt that timeline.

The 777X is the successor to the 777, and it was initially supposed to come into service in 2020, helping to drive the next cycle of widebody airplanes. Moreover, Emirates is Boeing's key customer for the 777X, responsible for 205 of the 481 unfilled orders on the plane currently standing. Only Qatar Airways' 94 orders come anywhere near the Emirates contract. In other words, Emirates matters to Boeing and the 777X.