The Boeing Company (NYSE: BA) is preparing to release its first-quarter financial results, after closing fiscal 2025 on a strong note. The aircraft giant remains in a complex recovery phase, working to stabilize production while maintaining its market leadership. Management’s strategy now emphasizes quality and consistency, aiming to rebuild trust with regulators and customers following heightened operational scrutiny.
Q1 Report Due
Boeing is scheduled to report its Q1 2026 results on Wednesday, April 22, before the market opens. Analysts currently anticipate a challenging quarter as the company works through recent production adjustments. The consensus estimate for the quarter stands at a loss of approximately $0.63 per share on revenues of $22.1 billion. In the year-ago quarter, the company reported revenues of $19.5 billion and a loss of $0.49 per share. While Boeing has not provided specific numerical guidance for the quarter, CFO Jay Malave previously signaled that deliveries might be lower than initially forecast due to a quality defect on the 737 line that affected roughly 25 aircraft.
So far in 2026, Boeing’s stock has shown signs of volatility as investors weigh long-term order growth against short-term manufacturing hurdles. After a dip in early April, the stock recently rebounded to trade around $221.72, reflecting a gain of nearly 17% over the last two weeks. From an investment perspective, Boeing remains a “long-game” prospect; its massive backlog of over $600 billion provides a safety net, but the company’s ability to convert those orders into cash flow depends on hitting production targets without further technical delays.
Review of Q4 2025
The company entered 2026 after a surprisingly strong fourth quarter. In Q4 2025, Boeing reported revenue of $23.9 billion, a 57% increase year-over-year. The company reported earnings of $10.23 per share for Q4, on a reported basis, compared to a loss last year. A significant driver of the strong bottom-line performance was a $9.6 billion gain from the sale of its Digital Aviation Solutions business. More importantly for operations, Boeing delivered 160 commercial airplanes in Q4 alone, its highest quarterly total since 2018, and generated a positive free cash flow of $0.4 billion.
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Boeing’s CEO Kelly Ortberg said in the Q4 earnings call, “We haven’t fully turned the corner, but we’re making real progress in getting back to the Boeing everyone expects of us. When we spoke a year ago, we were just in the early stages of our four-point plan to stabilize our business, execute on our development programs, change our culture, and build a new future for Boeing. Today, our customers and stakeholders are seeing the difference in how we work together to uphold our commitments and deliver high-quality products and services.”
Outlook
Looking ahead, Boeing’s primary milestone for the coming months is the activation of a new 737 production line in Everett, Washington, scheduled for this summer. This line is intended to help the company reach its goal of producing 500 MAX airplanes annually. For the full year 2026, the company is targeting a total free cash flow of between $1 billion and $3 billion, signaling a return to more predictable financial health.
As of mid-April, Boeing shares are showing moderate upward momentum, suggesting that the market may be pricing in the anticipated delivery numbers for Q1 while focusing on the potential for a stronger production ramp-up in the second half of the year.
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