CEA and its subsidiaries in Shanghai had 14 MAX jets delivered prior to the initial grounding of the planes in March of 2019. However, Boeing’s largest client in China claims that it will not include the MAX aircraft in its delivery plans through 2024. Additionally, none of the Chinese state carriers confirmed that they would resume taking the MAX once it is officially back in service.
More bad news
Ronald Epstein, a Bank of America analyst, in a note to clients, stated that he believes Boeing’s troubles are not behind them. He concluded: To further back up his point, the analyst cut his price target for the stock from the previous $180 to now $150, believing that the MAX grounding would lead to a two-year disruption for the company.
BA stock performance and analysis
Accordingly, BA shares are down over 40% year-to-date with a 5%, drop in the most recent session. Shares trade below all daily Simple Moving Averages on increased sell volumes in May. If shares dip below $120, the next resistance line could be the pandemic low of $95 a share. On the other hand, analysts rate the shares as a strong buy, predicting that the next 12 months’ average price could reach $221.88, which is 83.33% higher than the current trading price of $120.70. On the whole, it seems as if little good news is surrounding Boeing at the moment. This, in turn, has a negative correlation with the share price. Issues in China that MAX has had, analysts cutting price targets, and the company generally performing worse than usual makes it hard to build a case to own the shares of the company in the short term. Despite Boeing being part of the duopoly with Airbus (OTCMKTS: EADSY) in the aircraft business, current macroeconomic trends and inflation worries will likely cause more pain in the short term for BA. Disclaimer: The content on this site should not be considered investment advice. Investing is speculative. When investing, your capital is at risk.