777x Live

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Boeing closed the books on a bruising 2020 by announcing another unpleasant surprise on Wednesday: a $6.5-billion hit from delays to its new 777X plane that exacerbated the aerospace giant's annual loss.

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Emirates won’t take delivery of 777Xs until 2023. Emirates now only intends to start taking delivery of the brand new Boeing 777X as of 2023. For context, this is the latest generation Boeing 777 aircraft, featuring higher capacity, more range, and all around better economics.

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Boeing, which saw its revenues ravaged by the commercial airline downturn sparked by the COVID-19 crisis and the 20-month grounding of its 737 MAX model, now expects first deliveries of the wide-body 777X in late 2023, compared with the earlier timetable of 2022.

The accounting for the 777X prolongation pushed Boeing's fourth-quarter loss to $8.4 billion, plunging its tally for all of 2020 to $11.9 billion in the red, its biggest ever annual loss.

The past year was one of 'profound societal and global disruption which significantly constrained our industry,' said Chief Executive Dave Calhoun.

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'The deep impact of the pandemic on commercial air travel, coupled with the 737 MAX grounding, challenged our results.'

In light of radically worsened market conditions, Boeing has taken a hacksaw to costs, announcing job cuts of some 30,000 employees over two years.

The company also completed a $25-billion bond offering to provide liquidity to ride out the downturn.

Boeing executives emphasized that they expect a long-term recovery in travel demand, but reiterated that it will take about three years for activity to return to pre-pandemic levels.

They cautioned that profit margins will be under pressure until demand returns and the company is able to ramp up plane production.

'I'm quite optimistic,' Calhoun said in a conference call with analysts.

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'There's nothing about the market right now that has me switched off on that, but we are talking about 2023. It's going to take that long for us to sort of work our way out of the COVID world.'