Boeing Blows Past Estimates With Help From Tax Cut; Shares Surge

Boeing Co. jumped as earnings rose on surging deliveries of the 737, the planemaker’s largest source of profit, and an unexpectedly large one-time gain from U.S. tax cuts.
The company pocketed a tax boost of $1.74 a share in the fourth quarter and expects more benefits to come this year. Corporate levies are falling just as the Chicago-based manufacturer starts to see large cash gains from its 787 Dreamliner after a decade of losses.

Money Machine

Boeing expects that cash flow will continue to climb this year

Lower taxes are combining with record jetliner deliveries to fuel the cash gush at Boeing, the biggest gainer on the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 2017 and so far this year. In an earnings report, the company predicted the first annual sales growth since 2015 and said operating cash flow, a focus for investors, would climb to $15 billion.
“The buyback and cash flow have been the whole story on the stock for the last year,” Ken Herbert, an analyst at Canaccord Genuity, said in an interview before the earnings were released.
Shares increased 5.5 percent to $356.32 before the start of regular trading in New York. Boeing had advanced 15 percent this year through Tuesday, the largest gain among the 30 members of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The stock has more than doubled since the start of 2017 as Boeing surpassed General Electric Co. to become the largest U.S. industrial company by market value.
Adjusted fourth-quarter earnings were $4.80 a share, Boeing said, or $3.06 a share excluding the tax gain. Analysts had predicted $2.90 a share, according to the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue rose 8.9 percent to $25.4 billion, compared with the $24.7 billion analysts expected.

Steady Gains

As GE has stumbled, Boeing’s steady performance and willingness to hand shareholders bucketfuls of cash attracted investors, Herbert said. The aerospace manufacturer has pledged to return the equivalent of its free cash flow to investors through an $18 billion share buyback program and 20 percent dividend increase approved by directors in December.
Revenue has declined since 2015 as Boeing slowed deliveries of its highly profitable 777 jetliners amid waning sales and a shift to a new model. But earnings per share have continued to rise as buybacks contributed to a 15 percent drop in the company’s average share count.
Under Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg, Boeing has rolled out new planes such as the 737 Max and 787-10 with few glitches while rival Airbus SE battled engine delays for its A320neo and A330neo. Muilenburg’s campaign to make Boeing leaner has lowered the cost of goods and services.

The planemaker is forecasting sales growth in 2018 as Boeing lifts 737 output by 11 percent and pockets additional tax savings. Revenue will range from $96 billion to $98 billion, the company predicted, compared with the $93.6 billion expected by analysts.
Driving those increases will be another record-setting year of aircraft deliveries. Boeing expects to ship 810 to 815 airliners, up from 763 last year.

About Mr Bean

This is a short description in the author block about the author. You edit it by entering text in the "Biographical Info" field in the user admin panel.

0 comentários :

Post a Comment