Boeing shares tumbled in pre-market trading in New York after an emergency door separated from an Alaska Airlines 737-9 Max jet over Portland on Friday evening, forcing the Federal Aviation Administration and European Union Aviation Safety Agency to ground the jets for inspections. Bloomberg Intelligence’s George Ferguson and Melissa Balzano believe the mid-cabin exit door that ripped off the Max jet on Friday “probably stems from a manufacturing oversight, a sign of deficiency at Spirit AeroSystems, Boeing’s key supplier.” “Manufacturing training and oversight appear to be lacking, as Spirit’s component flaws have become an unsettling pattern,” the analysts continued.Persisting quality control issues pose a significant threat to Boeing’s turnaround efforts. The increased production rates of the 737, for which Spirit is the top fuselage supplier, are crucial for boosting profits and cash flow for both companies. Source: BloombergA faltering turnaround plan is why Boeing shares plunged 9%, and shares of Spirit AeroSystems crashed 20%. Meanwhile, competitor Airbus shares rose 1.5% in European trading. Here are the current operators of the 737-9 Max jets:Source: BloombergWall Street analysts said continued quality control issues at Boeing and Spirit AeroSystems could derail the 737 Max production ramp (list courtesy of Bloomberg).Morgan Stanley (equal-weight, PT $255):
JPMorgan (overweight, PT $270):
Citi (buy, PT $315):
Truist Securities:
Remember this.
As a reminder, the 737 Max was “designed by clowns who in turn are supervised by monkeys”.https://t.co/Z5rt2LoI3e
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) January 6, 2024
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