CHICAGO — With the 737 Max *** still grounded after two ****** *******, deliveries of new Boeing jets are falling far behind last year’s pace.
Boeing said Tuesday that it delivered 30 commercial airliners during May, down 56% from the 68 it made in May 2018.
Deliveries of 737s plummeted from 47 a year ago to just eight last month. All eight were an older model of 737, call the NG.
Boeing is still building Max jets in Washington state, but they are being parked for now.
The Chicago-based company has 4,550 unfilled orders for the Max but stopped deliveries after regulators around the ***** grounded the plane following ******* in Indonesia and Ethiopia that ****** 346 people. It’s working on changes to flight-control software implicated in the *******.
Boeing reported a cancelled order for 71 Max planes that were to be leased to *** Airways until the financially struggling Indian carrier suspended all flights in April. Boeing has not reported other large cancellations despite the Max’s grounding.
Orders for all Boeing airlines were “anemic” in May but should be better at next week’s Paris air show, said Cowen Research aerospace analyst Cai von Rumohr.
Shares of Boeing fell $4.47, or 1.3%, to close at $349.33 on Tuesday. They have dropped 21% since early March, shortly before the second Max *****.