Boeing records zero new Max orders following global groundings - Action News
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Boeing records zero new Max orders following global groundings

Boeing said on Tuesday orders nearly halved in the first quarter and the planemaker handed over far fewer aircraft, as it struggles with a worldwide grounding of its best-selling 737 Max jets following two fatal crashes.

Boeing records zero new Max orders following global groundings

The fall in order suggests that airlines had adopted a wait-and-watch approach as Boeing looks to ride out the worst crisis in its history. (David Ryder/Bloomberg)

Boeing's orders and deliveries sank in the first quarter, with zero new orders for the 737 Maxfollowing a worldwide grounding in March in the wake of two fatal plane crashes.

The groundings forced Boeing to freeze deliveries of the Max, which had been its fastest-selling jetliner until a March 10 crash on Ethiopian Airlines that killed all 157 onboard, just five months after a similar crash on Lion Air that killed all 189 passengers and crew.

Total orders, an indication of future demand, fell to 95 aircraft in the first quarter from 180 a year earlier, suggesting a wait-and-watch approach for airlines as Boeing rides out the worst crisis in its history.

Still, Boeing is ahead of its European rival Airbus , which last week said it had won 62 gross orders during the first three months of 2019 but some 120 cancellations left it with a negative net order.

Chicago-based Boeing's first-quarter 737 deliveries tumbled about 33 per cent, pushing total aircraft deliveries down 19 per cent to 149 from a year earlier. Boeing delivered just 11 Maxin March before the suspension.

Deliveries are financially important because that is when planemakers receive the bulk of money from airlines' purchases.

It is still unclear when the Maxjets will fly again, with global regulators including China saying they would join a U.S. Federal Aviation Administration panel to review the aircraft's safety.

"A fix and removal of the grounding prior to September 2019 could be perceived positively," Jefferies analyst Sheila Kahyaoglu said, noting that fresh scrutiny of the certification process could potentially filter into Boeing's 777X program.

Boeing's shares, which have lost about 13 per centsince the crash, were down 1.66 per cent at $368.32 US in afternoon trading.

Goldman Sachs said it does not expect Boeing to deliver any Max's in the second quarter and said it was difficult to expect Maxorders at the upcoming Paris Air Show in June.

The latest variant of Boeing's 737 family, which makes up the bulk of its narrowbody production, has been viewed as the likely workhorse for global airlines for decades and central to Boeing's long-running battle against Airbus.

Boeing said last week it would cut monthly 737 Maxproduction by 20 per cent starting mid-April, without giving an end-date.

The company had been ramping up Maxdeliveries before the grounding, with the planes accounting for nearly half of its deliveries in the last few months.

There were more than 300 Maxjetliners in operation at the time of the fatal Lion Air crash last October, and about 4,600 more on order.