Wednesday is Boeing BA -0.35%’s earnings call for the fourth quarter and full year of 2015.
There continue to be three of four prime issues that overhang each earnings call, and nothing has changed this week.
It’s a given within the analyst community that if analysts ask “hard” questions, Boeing Investor Relations is likely to ban them from future earnings calls questions and/or withhold Boeing participation from analyst-arranged client meetings or aerospace conferences.
Media historically has been more willing to ask tough questions, but even many of these are timid.
It’s time for hard questions
With this as background, here are the questions that should be asked of Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg but probably won’t be:
777 Production Gap GPS +0.00%: Boeing failed last year to achieve its long-stated goal of selling 40-60 777 Classics per year, and even some of the Classics in the backlog—such as those for freighters—don’t deliver until beyond 2020. When you also consider the ramp up of the 777X and the feathering in of the Classics and the X, it appears Boeing still needs to sell about 200 more Classics. This seems an impossible task, especially given the continued weakness in the global air cargo market. You’ve announced a Classic rate cut to seven per month but it clearly looks like you have to go to six or five per month. When can we expect to see these additional rate cuts?
747-8 Program termination: The 747-8 program is in even worse shape than the 777 Classic. There are only 20 airplanes in backlog, with the last delivery scheduled in May of next year, according to Ascend data base. You have about a half dozen White Tails. It appears there are no orders new orders on the horizon. The world air cargo market is going backwards, not forward. The two aircraft for Air Force One are the only orders for 2018 or beyond, and even these aren’t in contract. When are you going to terminate the program?
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