SF Gate: Boeing CEO says air travel facing a long trip back to health

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Wednesday, May 22, 2002 (AP)
Boeing CEO says air travel facing a long trip back to health



   (05-22) 12:04 PDT (AP) --
   ST. LOUIS (Dow Jones/AP) -- The air-travel industry will need a relative=
ly
long time to return to health, Boeing Co. chairman and chief executive
Phil Condit said Wednesday.
   Speaking to analysts during the company's annual investor conference,
Condit said the dot-com euphoria contributed to the number of people
flying, and so air travel numbers were a "bit artificial."
   Dot-com employees traveled "at the drop of a hat," Condit said, and they
tended to fly in first class and business class. Business from those
travelers began to drop off prior to Sept. 11.
   Airline travel hit a bottom point because of Sept. 11 and "it will take a
while for airline traffic to come back," Condit said.
   Boeing, the Chicago-based aerospace company, said it has adjusted its
production schedule accordingly.
   Condit said the current downturn in the U.S. economy "is a pretty mild"
one, and he's optimistic because the productivity numbers have been
strong. He said he expects the economy to "keep chugging along."
   In response to a question about what Boeing's priorities are for using i=
ts
cash, Condit said the company is looking carefully at opportunities where
it can leverage its strengths and increase its value.
   It won't make an acquisition that doesn't accomplish that, he added.
   Boeing may also buy back some of its stock, Condit said.
   The aircraft maker also would like to get back to an AAA credit rating,
the executive said. The company's credit rating was likely downgraded more
as a reaction to what's going on in the world than from something specific
at Boeing, Condit said. The company's balance sheet is in good shape, he
noted.
   Standard & Poor's credit rating for Boeing is A-plus and it's A-2 from
Moody's Investors Service.
   Boeing continues to expect it will deliver about 380 airplanes this year
and between 275 and 300 aircraft next year, said Alan Mulally, president
and chief executive of Boeing's commercial airplanes unit.
   Boeing's low point in production will be in 2003, with Boeing estimating
some recovery in 2004, Mulally said.
   Still, Boeing wasn't counting on production coming back when it devised
its business strategy, he said.
   Boeing delivered 527 airplanes in 2001.

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Copyright 2002 AP

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