Military

Boeing (BA) Management Get Worse By The Day

R218533_855025Maybe Boeing (BA) should just stop selling airplanes and leave the market to Airbus. At least once a month, the US company says it will have to delay deliveries to customers. Not only does this hurt earnings, it also gives unhappy clients a chance to ask for compensation.

According to The Wall Street Journal, "Boeing Co. is reworking its entire production schedule, adding as much as 10 weeks to the original delivery date for all 3,734 jetliners in its order backlog."

Boeing and its shareholders are now feeling the effects of the firm’s remarkably poor decision to allow its machinists to strike for two months instead of giving them a reasonable contract. Boeing stands to make so much on the delivery of 3,000 aircraft that it is hard to imagine why it would push back or completely risk those sales.

But, Boeing management did show poor judgment. It gave its major competitor Airbus a chance to improve its relationship with customers at the world’s largest airlines and, in the process, hurt is own image in the world aviation market and on Wall St.

Boeing shares trade under $40, well below their 52-week high of $94.60. Management probably blames that on the recession and stock market crash. In other words, the delay of getting out that huge order book has nothing to do with it.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Smart Investors Are Quietly Loading Up on These “Dividend Legends”

If you want your portfolio to pay you cash like clockwork, it’s time to stop blindly following conventional wisdom like relying on Dividend Aristocrats. There’s a better option, and we want to show you. We’re offering a brand-new report on 2 stocks we believe offer the rare combination of a high dividend yield and significant stock appreciation upside. If you’re tired of feeling one step behind in this market, this free report is a must-read for you.

Click here to download your FREE copy of “2 Dividend Legends to Hold Forever” and start improving your portfolio today.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.