Boeing Will Be Much Less Profitable After the Strike

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Boeing’s labor strike entered its eighth-straight week on Friday — but hope is growing that the strike could soon end.

On Friday, Boeing (NYSE: BA) negotiators met with leadership of the International Association of Machinists (IAM) and agreed on a proposal to raise machinist wages by a total of 38% over the next four years. By one measure, in fact, the total average wage of a machinist could rise 44% over the course of the contract, exceeding the union’s initial demand for a 40% wage hike (but not reinstating the company’s defined benefit plan, as some union members had wanted).

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With the addition of a one-time ratification bonus of $12,000, the new offer has the potential to end the strike on Monday, when union members will vote on the contract.

At 52 days in length, that would still make this strike the fourth-longest in Boeing’s history.

Earlier this week, Boeing announced it will issue and sell as many as 129.4 million shares of new common stock, including an overallotment option. At an offer price of $143 per share, this could generate $18.5 billion in new cash. The company also aims to issue and sell up to 115 million depositary shares (also including an overallotment option, they represent 5.8 million shares of preferred stock that is convertible into up to 40.6 million common shares). Paying 6% interest until converted, this sale will generate approximately $5.8 billion in cash.

In total, this has the potential to raise roughly $24.3 billion in new cash for Boeing, and basically maxes out Boeing’s plan, first announced two weeks ago, to raise up to $25 billion in cash over the next three years.

Boeing’s intentions for these funds were clear: Just as when COVID-19 struck and cratered sales of Boeing planes, and the company raised cash from debt and equity sales to tide it over until revenues revived — so too this time, Boeing would amass cash to keep itself solvent until the strike ended.

Against all odds, though, Boeing’s massive cash-raise could end up ending the strike, by giving Boeing the money it will need to meet the union’s pay-raise demands.

The news isn’t all good for Boeing — nor for its investors. Here’s what you should expect to happen to Boeing going forward, assuming the IAM votes to approve Boeing’s contract offer, and assuming similar 38% wage-hikes begin filtering out to the company’s other workers:

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