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S&P puts Boeing's rating on CreditWatch unfavorable as strike drags out

International rankings firm S&P stated on Tuesday it had positioned Boeing's ranking on CreditWatch negative as about 33,000 of the U.S. planemaker's workers stay on strike, halting production of its successful jets.

The union, whose members have actually now been on strike for 26 days, is seeking a 40% pay increase over 4 years and the restoration of a defined-benefit pension that was taken away in the agreement a decade ago.

The rankings agency approximates that Boeing will sustain a cash outflow of about $10 billion in 2024 and will likely need incremental funding.

S&P's CreditWatch listing shows the increased likelihood of a downgrade if the strike continues, increasing costs and postponing the company's healing in airplane production and money circulation generation.

Last month, all three significant ratings companies consisting of S&P had actually alerted that an extended strike at Boeing's factories in the U.S. West Coast may cause a rankings downgrade, a headache for the planemaker that is encumbered enormous financial obligation.

The very first labor strike at Boeing considering that 2008 accompanies a. period of intense scrutiny of the company by U.S. regulators and. airline company customers after a mid-air incident in January when a. door panel separated from a 737 MAX jet.

The business's financial resources are currently groaning due to a $60. billion debt pile.

S&P said on Tuesday it does not expect the company to. reach its objective of increasing the production of its best-seller. 737 MAX to 38 aircrafts a month by the end of the year.

It estimates the strike to cost Boeing more than $1. billion per month, in spite of the cost-saving procedures the. planemaker carried out in reaction to the production stop.

(source: Reuters)