Boeing’s New CEO Faces One-Two Punch a Month After Taking Over

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(Bloomberg) -- Little more than a month since Boeing Co.’s new chief executive officer took over with a mandate to pull the planemaker out of crisis, things are moving in the opposite direction.

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Kelly Ortberg now faces the dual challenge of negotiating an acceptable labor accord after the company’s first overture was rejected and 33,000 workers in the Seattle area decided to strike. Just hours after they walked out, Boeing’s credit rating risked being cut to junk, a move that would dramatically increase financing costs of the heavily indebted manufacturer.

The strike by members of the International Association of Machinists And Aerospace Workers union adds to the list of challenges already facing the company, from its massive debt load to the troubled defense subsidiary to anemic cash flow. That puts Ortberg on the hot seat as he looks to avoid a prolonged work stoppage during Boeing’s biggest crisis in recent memory.

“We see Boeing in a particularly weakened position,” Bank of America analyst Ron Epstein said in a client note.

Boeing Machinists across the US West Coast stopped work at midnight on Friday. Hundreds of workers occupied picket lines at the Renton factory outside of Seattle that makes Boeing’s top-selling aircraft, the 737 Max.

Despite a contract Boeing touted as its most-generous ever, Machinists voted 94.6% to reject it, with 96% supporting a strike. Boeing’s offer didn’t compensate for 16 years of stagnated wages, higher out-of-pocket health care costs and the relocation of thousands of union jobs, said Jon Holden, president of IAM District 751, who added the union would get back to the table “as quickly as we can.”

“This has been a long time coming, our members spoke loud and clear tonight,” Holden said to a packed hall of union members and media. “Clearly there were aspects of this agreement that weren’t good enough.” By the time he’d finished speaking, the chants of “strike, strike” were deafening.

Ortberg has already taken some important symbolic steps toward reorienting the company around the factory floor and improve relations with employees. He’s buying a house in the Seattle area, making him the first Boeing CEO in two decades to live and work in the metropolitan area nicknamed Jet City. That’s a shift from former leader Dave Calhoun, who worked primarily from his homes in New Hampshire and South Carolina, and also allowed other leaders to work remotely.