BEINSMARTSIDE Australia Boeing shares fall on report that China has halted its deliveries

Boeing shares fall on report that China has halted its deliveries

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Shares of Boeing have fallen following a report that China has halted the delivery of all its jets to airlines in the country as part of an escalating trade war that has enveloped the world’s two biggest economies.

Boeing, a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, fell in early trading on Tuesday (Wednesday AEST) after a Bloomberg report that Chinese authorities had ordered its airlines not to take any further Boeing deliveries. Shares were down 1 per cent by midday.

Neither Chinese authorities, Boeing nor the White House immediately responded to CNN requests for comment on the report, although US President Donald Trump said in a social media post that China “just reneged on the big Boeing deal, saying that they will ‘not take possession’ of fully committed to aircraft.”

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The move would be a blow not just to Boeing, America’s largest exporter, but also to the US economy, the world’s largest.

As Trump has levied tariffs on trading partners – including at least 145 per cent on many Chinese products – other nations have retaliated as well, in some cases sparking a tit-for-tat that now threatens to hurt companies, manufacturing and jobs around the world.

Trump’s acrimony toward China has been particularly acute, with a spiralling trade war with that nation threatening everything from American farmers to iPhone shipments – even as confusion has mounted over exemptions and delays.

Boeing is particularly vulnerable to the current trade disputes between the US and its trading partners. Unlike many multinational companies, Boeing builds all of its planes at US factories before sending nearly two-thirds of its commercial planes to customers outside the US.

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And Boeing is a major part of the US economy, contributing an estimated $US79 billion and supporting 1.6 million jobs both directly and indirectly. It has nearly 150,000 US employees of its own.

Boeing has been struggling for six years, racking up $US51 billion in operating losses since 2018, the last year it reported an annual profit.

China is the world’s largest market for aircraft purchases, with Boeing’s own recent analysis estimating that Chinese airlines are expected to purchase 8830 new planes over the next 20 years.

Boeing was already dealing with a drop in sales for years in China, even before the introduction of tariffs. China has put tariffs of 125 per cent on all imports from the US.

Boeing’s jets cost tens of millions of dollars each, so tariffs that more than double the price would make them unaffordable to any Chinese customers even without any new limits on deliveries.

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Deliveries are crucial to Boeing, since that’s when it gets paid. The company builds the plane first and gets most of its payment after delivering the finished product.

Choking off these deliveries is a particularly big blow for Boeing, which had a total of 55 planes in inventory at the end of 2024 that it has not been able to deliver to customers, primarily those in China and India, according to the company.

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