Is Boeing Stock a Buy Following Q3 Earnings? Analyst Weighs In
As restrictions tightened in Europe amidst rising new coronavirus cases, U.S. stocks went into a tailspin this week. Of course, the aviation sector wasnât spared, and despite better than expected Q3 earnings, neither was Boeing (BA). The stock ended the week down 14%, further adding to 2020âs poor performance.
Expectations were low heading into the quarterâs print, and despite posting a fourth consecutive quarterly loss, Boeingâs third-quarter results came in ahead of Wall Street estimates.
Revenue dropped by 29.4% year-over-year, yet at $14.1 billion still beat the Streetâs forecast by $140 million. The loss on the bottom line wasnât as bad as expected, either, with Non-GAAP EPS of -$1.39 beating consensus by $0.55.
Boeing reported negative (FCF) free cash flow of $5.08 billion, yet still, the figure was an improvement on the previous quarterâs negative $5.6 billion. However, with so much uncertainty surrounding the aviation industry, Boeingâs hope of turning cash flow positive next year looks a tad optimistic.
As a result, RBC analyst Michael Eisen cut his 2021 estimate from FCF generation of $3.9 billion to a cash burn of $5.3 billion. The change is âmostly driven by further build of inventory,” which the analyst sees “surpassing $90 BN in early â21,” and “a delay in the timing of liquidating those commercial aircraft.â Eisen now anticipates negative FCF until 1Q22, compared to the prior 3Q21.
Boeing announced it plans on cutting an additional 7,000 jobs. The company entered 2020 with 160,000 employees and has already reduced staff by 19,000. The A&D giant said it expects to cut the workforce down to 130,000 by the end of 2021.
It all points to an uphill struggle, although Eisen thinks BA can âturn an operating profit in â21.â
âWe believe profitability remains a wildcard as the company battles to remove cost out of the system to offset a lack of demand recovery and will largely be dependent on commercial demand improving,â Eisen said. âLonger-term, the structural moves to consolidate operations by up to 30%, investment in efficiencies, and permanently control cost should provide upside as demand recovers.â
Further catalysts including the re-certification of the 737-MAX, the âpotential incremental orders of commercial aircraftâ plus defense contract awards, keep Eisenâs rating an Outperform (i.e. Buy). His price target, at $181, implies a 25% upside from current levels. (To watch Eisenâs track record, click here)
BA gets mixed reviews from Eisenâs colleagues yet they lean to the bullsâ side. Based on 8 Buys, 9 Holds and 1 Sell, the stock has a Moderate Buy consensus rating. Upside of ~24% could be in the cards, given the $179 average price target. (See Boeing stock analysis on TipRanks)
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Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analyst. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.