By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
Reading: Boeing Suffers Loss of Revenue and Workers
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Travel Radar - Aviation NewsTravel Radar - Aviation News
  • Breaking News
  • Aviation
    • Aircraft
    • Airlines
    • Airshow & Events
    • Careers
    • Manufacturing
  • Travel
    • Airports
    • Points & Loyalty
    • Technology
    • Trip Reviews
  • Newsletters
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Copyright © Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2024 | All Rights Reserved
Travel Radar - Aviation News > News > Boeing Suffers Loss of Revenue and Workers

Boeing Suffers Loss of Revenue and Workers

Radhakrishnan Pattabiraman
Last updated: 30 October 2020 21:13
By Radhakrishnan Pattabiraman 3 Min Read
Share
SHARE

The COVID-19 pandemic hit Boeing – one of the world’s prominent aircraft manufacturers – severely due to the large slump in travel demand.  The headaches it is having with the 737MAX forces the organization to give pink-slips to as many as 7000 employees.

Boeing 737-NG
Boeing 737  MAX 7 © Boeing

Prolonged Commercial Travel Downward Trend

Boeing reported a loss of $449 million in Q3 (JAS quarter) on Wednesday and announced additional job cuts to the tune of 7,000 that will effectively reduce the headcount by 30,000 positions over two years.

The world’s leading planemaker with headquarters in Seattle has been through a belt-tightening mode throughout 2020 in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic on top of the self-inflicted 737 MAX fiasco.

While headcount is nose-diving from 160,000 in January to 130,000 at the end of 2021, a drop of nearly 19 per cent in less than two years,  the company attributes these to the Pandemic impact other than their internal pressures on the 737 MAX program delays.

So, what is the strategy being adopted for recovery?  Dave Calhoun, Chief Executive Officer at Boeing says ”

“The global pandemic continued to add pressure to our business this quarter, and we’re aligning to this new reality by closely managing our liquidity and transforming our enterprise to be sharper, more resilient and more sustainable for the long term,”

Boeing 737 NG
Boeing B737 MAX  7 © Boeing

Boeing’s Current Financial Obstacles

A sharp drop in commercial air travel has prompted airlines to cancel plane orders or defer deliveries had further damaged the prospects of Boeing and crimping its revenues.

Boeing reported a loss of $449 million, compared with profits of $1.2billion in the year-ago period.  Revenues fell 29.2 per cent to $14.1billion.  The company’s finances have been under tremendous pressure due to the ground of the 737MAX in March 2019 which is now nearing regulatory approval to resume service albeit with a lengthy oversight process.  Please read Travel Radar’s story on the current 737MAX situation.

However,  Boeing expects to recover steadily which has an impressive and long history in the making of airplanes.

You Might Also Like

FedEx and Neste Launch Sustainable Aviation Fuel Initiative

Garmin Simplifies Aviation Charting with SmartCharts

World tourism soars: International tourist arrivals up 5% in 2025

Cathay Pacific Joins With Sinopec In a Sustainable Aviation Fuel Initiative

Deutsche Aircraft: Rolls out prototype aircraft D328eco

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link
What’s your thoughts?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Angry0
Radhakrishnan Pattabiraman
By Radhakrishnan Pattabiraman
Follow:
Aviation enthusiast, Japanese language enthusiast, currently, Personal Assistant to the Legislator of the state of Tamil Nadu, India. Has rich & successful experience in the Information Technology Industry
Previous Article Manchester Airport Nearly 200 European Airports Under Threat of Insolvency due to Coronavirus
Next Article Newark Liberty International Airport United Airlines COVID-19 Testing Trial – No Test, No Flight
4 Comments
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
4 Comments
Oldest
Newest Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jayashree Subramanyam
Jayashree Subramanyam
4 years ago

Excellent Article!! Very Informative!!

0
Reply
Jayashree Subramanyam
Jayashree Subramanyam
4 years ago

Excellent Informative Article!!!

0
Reply
Ram
Ram
4 years ago

Hope Boeing comes back stronger!

0
Reply
Ashok Balakrishnan
Ashok Balakrishnan
4 years ago

Very useful article. Thanks for the statistics

0
Reply

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe

Trending News

World Cabin Crew Day
Honoring the Heart of the Skies: Celebrating World Cabin Crew Day
Aviation Careers
Washington Dulles International Airport
Global Passenger Growth Soars in April 2025
Airline Economics Aviation
IndiGo aircraft taking off
IndiGo: Ton Dortmans joins IndiGo to support A350 entry into service, and MRO expansion
Aviation Careers Manufacturing
Finnair
Industrial action continues to disrupt Helsinki Airport, Finnair
Airlines Aviation
London City Airport
London City Airport Holds Fifth Women in Aviation Challenge
Airports Airshow & Events Aviation Careers
//

Travel Radar is the leading digital hub for all things aviation and air-travel. Discover our latest aviation news, aviation data, insight and analysis.

Discover

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Press & PR
  • Privacy & Legal

Our Content

  • News
  • Data
  • Images
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Click here to Signup!

© Travel Radar Media Ltd. 2015-2025 | ISSN #2635-0696 | Trademark #UK00003579704
wpDiscuz
adbanner
AdBlock Detected
Ads help us bring you high-quality, independent journalism for free. Support us by whitelisting us from your ad blocker.
Okay, I'll Whitelist
Welcome to the TR Community!

Sign in to your account

Register Lost your password?