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Boeing 737 MAX |
Boeing 737 MAX build rate hit its target in the second quarter. The Boeing 737 MAX build rate reached 38 jets per month. Boeing now seeks removal of the FAA cap as the Boeing 737 MAX build rate stabilizes.
Production recovery and path to higher rates
Boeing increased 737 MAX output to the FAA-limited 38 per month. The company aims for 42 per month later this year. Earlier, a 2024 panel blowout forced tighter quality control. Spirit Aerosystems shipset intake slowed to improve quality. A 2024 strike pushed 737 MAX output to zero before December restart. Consistent performance at “rate 38” will underpin any request.
Titanium demand brightens with widebody momentum
Boeing lifted 787 Dreamliner output to seven per month. That shift supports titanium supply chains hit by earlier slowdowns. Widebodies consume roughly double the titanium of narrowbodies. The 787 is about 15pc titanium by weight. The 737 MAX uses roughly 6–7pc, industry estimates suggest. Boeing also began building the 777-8 freighter. The freighter contains an even higher titanium share.
Deliveries, backlog, and financials improve
Quarterly deliveries rose 63pc to 150 aircraft. Sequential deliveries climbed 15pc. Boeing’s backlog exceeded 5,900 aircraft after 455 net orders. Quarterly revenue increased 35pc to $22.7bn. The quarterly loss narrowed to $612mn from $1.4bn.
Trade deals temper cost risk, but gaps remain
Zero-for-zero aerospace tariff deals eased cost pressure. Boeing now sees less than the earlier “$500mn bogey.” Agreements with the UK, EU, and Japan helped. However, no deal exists yet with Italy on certain fuselage parts. USMCA talks remain a watchpoint for cross-border components. A steadier Boeing 737 MAX build rate depends on predictable trade terms.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Boeing’s output stabilization materially lifts titanium demand signals, especially from widebodies. Watch the 777-8F ramp and FAA decisions for timing. Tariff carve-outs reduce risk, but Italy and USMCA outcomes still matter for margins.
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