Boeing Chief Executive Dave Calhoun told reporters on Wednesday the U.S. planemaker expects to resume 737 MAX production months before its forecasted mid-year return to service and said it did not plan to suspend or cut its dividend.
The company announced a production halt in December, when the global grounding of the fast-selling 737 MAX following two deadly crashes in five months looked set to last into mid-2020.
Calhoun said the company is not considering scrapping the MAX and expects it will continue to fly for a generation. He also said it will not launch a marketing campaign to get customers to get back on 737 MAX planes.
He also disclosed Boeing is starting with a โclean sheet of paperโ on a New Midsize Airplane but it is not clear if the company is scrapping the existing design.
The company said on Tuesday it now expects regulators to approve the planeโs return to service in the middle of the year. Calhoun said he did not see recent issues raised about wiring or software as โserious problems.โ
Boeing shares were down 2% on Wednesday.
Calhoun said Boeing is not planning to cut or suspend the dividend because Boeing has the โfinancial capacity and capability to do the things we need to do.โ Calhoun said he โwill stay on that path unless something dramatic changes.โ
Calhoun declined to provide a specific date for resumption of production, but said it โwill be reinvigorated months before that moment in June because we have to get that line started up again.โ He also said the company would make some changes to the 737 MAX production line to make it more efficient.
The CEO said the company โwill slowly, steadily bring our production rate up a few months before that date in the middle of the year.โ He said the company was not planning to lay off any employees because of the latest delay in the MAX.
The latest push back in the forecasted return to service is due to the companyโs decision to endorse simulator training for pilots before they resume flights, Calhoun said. โWe can get this thing back on its horse and we will,โ he added.
Calhoun was a director at Boeing for a decade before taking over as CEO earlier this month. The board ousted Dennis Muilenburg in December amid rising anger by regulators, politicians and customers.
He said the company should have not have repeatedly revised the planeโs forecasted return. โIt was hard for anybody to trust us,โ Calhoun said.
Calhoun said before certification there will be โa few more things somewhere along the way that the FAA and us will determine need a little extra work and weโll do it. They wonโt be big emergencies things, they wonโt be things that take the airplane down.โ
REUTERS