-
Of the 30 corporations within the Dow Jones Industrial Common, Boeing’s share value fell probably the most in 2024.
-
The planemaker received off to a worrying begin with January’s Alaska Airways blowout.
-
Its new CEO additionally needed to deal with a seven-week strike that contributed to supply delays.
Boeing’s painful 2024 ended with the planemaker rating as the largest loser within the Dow Jones Industrial Common.
Its share value dropped 31% final yr — the worst of the index’s 30 corporations, in line with Markets Insider information.
The planemaker was near avoiding that title as Nike shares fell almost 30% throughout the identical interval. As an entire, the Dow Jones was up 13%, led by Nvidia after its inventory greater than doubled.
Simply days into 2024 it was obvious that it was going to be a testing yr for Boeing.
On January 5, an Alaska Airways 737 Max misplaced a door plug in midair. The truth that the aircraft was delivered 66 days earlier recommended the issue originated with the producer. That was later proven within the Nationwide Transportation Security Board’s preliminary report that stated the aircraft left Boeing’s manufacturing unit lacking key bolts.
The incident sparked an overhaul of the corporate’s processes and tradition — and a wave of criticism from airline bosses.
Regulators positioned Boeing underneath additional scrutiny too. The Federal Aviation Administration restricted manufacturing of the 737 Max to 38 jets a month. Its administrator, Mike Whitaker, instructed Reuters final month he expects Boeing to take a number of months to stand up to that quantity.
In March, Dave Calhoun stepped down as CEO. He was changed in August by Kelly Ortberg, an business veteran who signaled a return to prioritizing engineering over revenue.
Ortberg introduced plans to be primarily based in Seattle, Boeing’s historic house, and visited factories.
Nonetheless, the embattled firm could not keep out of the headlines.
In September, its Starliner spacecraft returned to Earth uncrewed. The astronauts it took to the Worldwide Area Station had been imagined to return after eight days, however issues with Starliner meant they’re as an alternative set to spend eight months in house.
Later that month, some 30,000 Boeing staff went on strike, hampering manufacturing for seven weeks amid tense union negotiations. 737 Max manufacturing did not restart till December.
Late deliveries continued to annoy airline clients. Throughout the strike, Ortberg introduced additional delays to Boeing’s extremely anticipated however yet-to-be-certified 777X jet.
The CEO additionally stated Boeing would lay off 10% of its 170,000 workers.
Boeing’s greatest rival, Airbus, has seen its inventory rise 14% over the previous yr.