The Boeing Company (NYSE:BA) Q4 2022 Earnings Call dated Jan. 25, 2023.
Corporate Participants:
Matt Welch — Vice-President of Investor Relations
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Peter Arment — Baird — Analyst
Doug Harned — Bernstein — Analyst
Noah Poponak — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Myles Walton — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Christine Liwag — Morgan Stanley. — Analyst
Seth Seifman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Cai von Rumohr — Cowen — Analyst
David Strauss — Barclays — Analyst
Jason Gursky — Citi — Analyst
Ron Epstein — Bank of America — Analyst
Rich Safran — Seaport Research Partners — Analyst
Sheila Kahyaoglu — Jefferies — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Thank you for standing-by. Good day everyone, and welcome to the Boeing Company’s Fourth Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. Today’s call is being recorded. The management discussion and slide presentation, plus the analyst question-and-answer session are being broadcast live over the Internet. [Operator Instructions] At this time for opening remarks and introductions, I’m turning the call over to Mr. Matt Welch, Vice-President of Investor Relations for the Boeing Company. Mr. Welch. Please go ahead.
Matt Welch — Vice-President of Investor Relations
Thank you and good morning, welcome to Boeing’s fourth quarter 2022 earnings call. I am Matt Welch, and with me today are Dave Calhoun, Boeing’s President and Chief Executive Officer, and Brian West, Boeing’s, Executive Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer. And as a reminder, you can follow today’s broadcast and slide presentation at boeing.com.
As always, detailed financial information is included in today’s press release. Furthermore, projections, estimates and goals included in today’s discussion involve risks, including those described in our SEC filings and in the forward-looking statement disclaimer at the end of the web presentation. In addition, we refer you to our earnings release and presentation for disclosures and reconciliation of certain non-GAAP measures. Now, I will turn the call over to Dave Calhoun.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Matt. Good morning, thanks to all of you for joining us this morning. Last time we were together was the second of November where we had a chance for the first time at least in my three-year tenure to talk about guidance and expectations for the years ahead. The good news is we had a very solid fourth quarter, a quarter that in my view puts us in good stead to step forward and meet the guidance that we have delivered to all of you. Not only have we taken big steps to reduce the risks that of course we faced over the last three years, but importantly, we’re well on our way to restoring the operational and financial strength that we got used to prior to our MAX moment. Challenges remain, we have a lot to do, but overall, we’re feeling pretty good about the way we closed ’22 and were well-positioned for ’23 and beyond.
Our key metric, as everybody knows, is free-cash flow. Importantly, we were able to generate more than $3 billion in free-cash flow in the fourth quarter, driven by the progress in our performance, and importantly, continued strong demand, and this helped us generate positive full-year cash-flow for the first time since 2018, a very important turnaround metric for us.
Several key milestones and events that I’d like to highlight. Let’s start with the BCA deliveries, which I know everyone tracks. ’22 total was 480 with 69 deliveries in December. Notably, the 737 deliveries, we had 387, and exceeded our target of 375. And it included 31 787s as we unwound inventory and delivered from the production line following the important return to delivery over the course of the summer.
On the order front and on the market side, we continue to see very strong demand across the portfolio. More than 800 net orders on the year driven by the 737 MAX and the 787. Highlighted most recently by the very historic deal with UAL, United Airlines in December. In 2022, we sold 200 plus net widebodies. That’s the most since 2018. More broadly, the 737 MAX team has made tremendous progress. Fleet is performing exceptionally well, production is stabilizing, demand is strong. We delivered a 1,000 plus 737 MAXs in total now, and since our return to service, the fleet has surpassed 3 million flight hours. It’s safe and it’s the most reliable of the airplane fleets. Production, we have walked on from 0 to 31 a month, and we are prioritizing stability which we have not yet achieved, but we’re on a steady course to do so. And orders, more than 1,500 gross orders to date.
737 MAX returning to service in China is another indication of this overall improvement in our business. This month, of course, we all know that, that occurred, we have more airplanes on the tarmac in China to bring back into service, just as we did here in the U.S. before we began any deliveries of any sort, and I’m not going to guess going-forward when deliveries may or may not start. As everyone knows, in our guidance, we had de-risked for that possibility.
737 MAX 7 and 10, everybody knows, we got our extension approved and attached for legislation at the end of the year, that was a very important moment. I’ll remind everyone that that doesn’t mean that these were certified, it simply means that the FAA and Boeing can follow the existing application and do that job, and do it the right way. So, we feel very, very good about having de-risked that moment as well.
I will also want to point out, every argument we made on behalf of that extension related to safety. The premise for our chosen course and the application that we filed was safety-first and it will always be safety-first.
Boeing Defense, our SLS launch, this was an enormous emotional upper for our company and for our team broadly. The ARTEMIS 1 launch in November which was powered by the SLS rocket was more than a little inspiring. And I’d like to congratulate the NASA team broadly for the succession of the Starliner mission, it’s an incredible success, incredible and it went beautifully and almost flawlessly every step of the way. So again, a significant accomplishment for space travel in general. But that rocket again just shows what Boeing is capable of when we put our minds to it, we follow our disciplines, we stay patient and ultimately prove to the world that there is more to do in space.
Boeing Global Services, another terrific story. It is simply following the recovery of our industry in general and everywhere in the world. So, we had a great quarter pretty much across the board. We continue to grow, we continue to invest, so that we are prepared to support our customers as they bring their airlines back to where they were before COVID.
So will reaffirm our guidance, and with this progress which we feel good about both the financial and the operational outlook that we shared with you in November, and that includes the cash-flow, the delivery ranges that we set for ’23 as well as for the 2025 and 2026 timeframe.
Our realities are still the same. A difficult supply-chain, and while average deliveries met our objectives, we continue to face a few too many stoppages in our lines simply so that we do not travel work as we run into supply-chain shortfalls. So those stoppages while they are coming down are not where they need to be, as we think about stable rates going forward.
I will not in this discussion and/or in Q&A highlight any one supplier within the supply-chain. Now that we’re working with all of them, there is a significant amount of transparency in those discussions between them, between us, and everybody is focused on the rate improvements that we’ve outlined to all of you.
All things considered in reflecting on these last few years, we’re feeling pretty good about where we stand heading into this year. Demand very strong, portfolio very well positioned, we have faced plenty of tests in number of orders all around the world with some of our toughest customers, and we know this portfolio is well positioned.
We have a robust pipeline of development programs including broadly across our defense business, and we’re innovating new capabilities that prepare us for the next generation of products.
One of the more significant achievements was recently announced by NASA and their sustainable flight demonstrator contract. This is a set of technologies that is intending to cut fuel emissions by up to 30%, those are the kinds of standards that in our view are required to ultimately launch a new commercial airplane, wrapped in sustainability. We’ve de-risked major aspects of the business and our performance is improving. We’re embedding lean across our operations to drive productivity, ultimately to achieve the kinds of targets that we’ve set out.
We’ve got work to do, but we’re feeling really good about our progress. We’re proud of our team and we’re confident in the future.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Brian West.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Great, thanks Dave, and good morning, everyone. Let’s go to the next page and cover the fourth quarter financial results. Revenue in the fourth quarter came in at $20 billion, that’s up 35% Year-over-Year, driven by higher commercial volume. Core operating margin was negative 3.3%, and the core loss per share was $1.75. Both the margin and the loss per share were significantly better than prior year and impacted in the quarter by period expenses and abnormal costs.
From a free-cash flow perspective, our primary financial metric was positive $3.1 billion for the quarter, up significantly versus the prior year on higher deliveries and strong order activity and up sequentially versus the prior quarter and a bit better than our original estimate.
I’ll take a minute to go through each of the business units. Moving on to the next page with BCA. BCA revenue in the fourth quarter was $9.2 billion, that’s up 94% year-over-year, driven by higher 787 and 787 deliveries, partially offset by 787 customer considerations. On the operating margins, they were negative 6.8% in the quarter, significantly better than a year ago, and in the quarter driven by abnormal costs and higher period expenses including higher R&D spending.
I’ll take a minute to go through a few highlights on the major programs, starting with the 737. We had 110 deliveries in the fourth quarter and 387 for the full-year, slightly ahead of our estimate. We ended the year with 250 MAX airplanes in inventory, 30 of which were Dash 7 and Dash 10s, and we had 138 for customers in China. We do expect the monthly deliveries from inventory to slow slightly as fewer airplanes will be available combined with some impact from the Dash 7, Dash 10 builds. We still expect most inventoried airplanes will be delivered by the end of 2024.
On the 787, we had 22 deliveries in the fourth quarter and 31 for the full year. We ended the year with 100 airplanes in inventory, most of which will be delivered by the end of 2024. We booked $350 million of abnormal costs in the quarter, taking the total to date to $1.7 billion. We’re increasing the abnormal accounting estimate by about $600 million to roughly $2.8 billion in total as we will be under the five per month production rate a bit longer than expected due to a supplier constraint that has temporarily slowed production. We still expect to hit five per month this year. Our total year delivery guidance of 70 to 80 is unchanged, and there is no change to the 2023 cash flows.
77 orders were strong in the quarter, and we’ve added 100 airplanes to the accounting quantity, which increases our GAAP program margin. On the 777X, the program timeline is holding and efforts are ongoing. Abnormal costs were $112 million in the quarter, and there is no change to the $1.5 billion total estimate.
On the customer settlement front, we continue to make good progress resolving contractual issues on the three big programs. The 737 MAX is near the finish line with the vast majority of customers settled. Of the original $9.3 billion of that we set aside, there’s only 3% left. On the 787, a year ago, we included a significant provision in the program, which has been very stable. There are far fewer customers in the MAX, and we’ve already reached agreement with several, all in line with our estimates. And the 777X, there are even fewer customers and discussions are ongoing. Keep in mind that the revenue and cash impact of these settlements will be over several years, and all contemplated in both the near and long-term financial guidance. Finally, on the orders front for BCA, we booked 376 orders in the quarter and have over 4,500 airplanes in backlog valued at $330 billion.
Moving on to the next page, I’ll cover BDS. BDS revenues in the fourth quarter were $6.2 billion, up 5% Year-over-Year. Operating margins were 1.8%, and if you include services, defense margins would be 200 basis-points higher to 4%. There are two things impacting BDS margins in the quarter. First, we felt the operational impact of supply-chain constraints in labor instability. Second, we saw adverse timing of certain cost accrual true-ups, including higher pension cost that flow-through the P&L in the quarter. The big focus for the BDS leadership team to improve execution stability both in the factory and in the supply base. Some additional highlights, as Dave mentioned, we’re very proud of ARTEMIS 1 successful mission to the moon last November, and we delivered 45 aircraft in the quarter, including the first P8 to New Zealand, as well as three satellites, including the first two O3b empower units.
We received $7 billion in orders during the quarter, including a contract for two KC-46A Tankers from Japan and an award for 12 Chinook helicopters from the Egyptian Air Force. The BDS backlog is $54 billion.
Moving on to the next page, Global Services. BGS had another strong quarter, primarily driven by our parts and distribution business. BGS revenue was $4.6 billion, up 6% year-over-year and operating margin was 13.9%. Commercial volume was very strong, partially offset by some softness in the government space. We received $5 billion in orders during the quarter, including an F-15 depot support order for the US Air Force, and we opened up the Germany distribution center. The BGS backlog is $19 billion.
Moving on to the full-year, on the next page, full-year financial results revenue came in at $66.6 billion, that’s 5% up year-over-year, driven by higher commercial volume, offset by lower defense revenue. Core operating margin was negative 7%, and the core loss per share was over $11, both a bit worse, reflecting the impact of defense charges taken earlier in the year. And free-cash flow, we generated $2.3 billion positive free-cash flow in the year, up significantly from the prior year, driven by higher deliveries in order activity.
Moving on to the next page, I just want to put that $2.3 billion of free-cash flow in perspective. As you can see from the chart on the left, we’ve made a lot of progress over the last three years. 2020 was the usage of $20 billion of cash, 2021 improved but was still a usage of $4 billion of cash. In 2022, $2.3 billion positive. As Dave mentioned, a lot of work that’s been done and more work to do, the team is pretty proud to get back to positive territory. It’s been the 737 return to service and the deliveries that are ramping. It’s been the 787 that has been restarted. It’s been the commercial market recovery that’s been a benefit along the way with a very strong order book, reflecting our customers’ confidence in our product lineup. And of course, our service business has held up incredibly well. It was a good exit to 2022 and we expect momentum to continue for 2023.
Moving on to the next page. Cash and debt. On the cash and marketable securities front, we ended the year with $17.2 billion, up $3 billion versus the third quarter, and we had $12 billion of revolving credit facilities, all of which remain undrawn. On the debt side, we finished the year with $57 billion in debt, and as a reminder, our investment-grade credit rating continues to be a top priority. Our liquidity position is strong, and we’re very comfortable satisfying near-term maturities, and the overall plan continues to be deliver airplanes, generate cash, pay down debt.
Moving on to the next page — 2023. Our financial outlook for 2023 is unchanged from what we shared in November. Operating cash-flow in total will be between $4.5 billion and $6.5 billion. We’ll reinvest about $1.5 billion in capex, for a net free-cash flow of $3 billion to $5 billion in 2023. As we start the year, overall demand remains strong. Global passenger traffic increased almost 70% in 2022, and we’re at 75% of pre pandemic levels globally. If you take out China, that number grows to over 90%. So, demand is pretty robust and reflective of our order book.
Our priority continues to be execution stability, and while we still see some disruptions in the factory and the supply chain, we’re hard at work with our partners to address these issues, and ultimately focused on meeting our customer commitments.
On the segment operating cash-flow, same numbers as November. BDS, we expect to be a usage of between $0.5 billion and $1 billion of cash. BGS will generate between $2.5 billion and $3 billion, and BCA will generate between $2.5 billion and $3.5 billion.
On the commercial delivery front, 737 deliveries are unchanged and between 400 and 450 airplanes, 787 deliveries are unchanged between 70 and 80 airplanes, and we’ve added a couple of items on the expense front, we expect R&D for 2023 to come in at about $3.2 billion versus $2.9 billion in 2022, the vast majority of this increase will be in BCA.
We also have unallocated eliminations and other, which will be relatively in-line with 2022, at $1.6 billion.
One important thing to note is on the quarterly phasing, it will look very similar to last year as both deliveries and the financials will improve throughout the course of the year. On the first quarter specifically, EPS will be an improvement over 4Q 2022 but remain in a loss position. And cash will still be a usage in the first-quarter, although an improvement from the first quarter of 2022. Overall, we’re squarely focused on free-cash flow, and it’s so far so good as we enter 2023.
Moving on to the last page, 2025 and 2026 long-term guidance. Same page we showed you in November. $10 billion of free-cash flow is still our objective. And it’s important to know that margins and EPS are important, but they will be uneven over the next two years, as we unwind the BCA inventory, we put the BCA abnormal costs behind us and we get the BDS margins back on track to its normal trajectory. We’re still confident that this plan is underpinned by things we largely control. One, productivity. Two, the commercial rate ramp. Three, services growth. And four, the transition of key defense programs from development to production.
Overall, we’re as confident today as we’re back in November, and we feel good about the way 2023 is starting.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Dave for any final comments.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I think, Brian, the numbers speak for themselves. We couldn’t be more pleased with the way the year closed with very few surprises. We’re heading into the year, we know the supply-chain is going to be tough and constrained, but we also believe that we control that environment, and it’s our job to get ahead of it. So, thank you. We’re happy to take some questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question will be from Peter Arment with Baird. Please go ahead.
Peter Arment — Baird — Analyst
Yeah, good morning, Dave and Brian. Hey, so congrats on the progress [Indecipherable] in the fourth quarter and the free cash flow generation, and you reiterated obviously that the long-term free cash flow target of $10 billion in the mid-decade and the $3 billion to $5 billion in ’23. So Brian, I guess, on ’23, can you just maybe talk around confidence levels around that expected free cash flow target specifically at BCA and BDS, like kind of what are the key risk to call out, I assume it’s supply chain around the guidance ranges.
And then just, Dave, unrelated question, but can you comment broadly on the pickup in MAX flights in China as our checks show 220 revenue flights that are scheduled in February, and there’s already 60 flights that have occurred this month. So clearly, there’s MAX activity that’s picking up in China, thanks.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Peter, why don’t I start with China. Your numbers are within the range of my numbers, that is what’s going on. I think as everybody knows, the opening up of China is going to be a major event in aviation. And the aviation industry was already stressed in terms of demand broadly in the world. So, this is a serious bump for everybody, but most importantly, within China, they need the MAX to fly to satisfy those demands. So, we were going to do there what we do here in the U.S., and focus on the airplanes they have on the tarmac today, which is close to 100 airplanes, the readiness of each and every one of them, and ultimately, they’re getting into full revenue service. So, for six months, I think that’s the course for all of us to stay focused on. And then, we’re going to take up the question of deliveries, and is there a moment in time where that begins to come back. I don’t want to predict that date, Peter, but the odds go up every day, our MAX gets back into service, and the airplanes that we have on our tarmacs, hopefully, we get ready and deliver to our customers.
So, I think there’s a reason to be optimistic. We will not change guidance and/or predict those outcomes until they actually occur.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
And Peter, on the cash flow, the 3% to 5%, again, we feel very confident with that range. The key underpinnings will be the deliveries that we talked about, the 37 at the low end assumes that we don’t get much better through the course of 2023 than we did this past year, which is low 30s for the whole year. At the high end, it actually says we do low 30s first half and then low 40s in second half. So I think that all of that is within the mix. As you recall, we had a big December. One caution is that December was kind of over 50 on the MAXs, but October was not quite that high, and that’s an indication that we’re still not stable, it’s still bumpy, but we still feel good about the overall trajectory in terms of being able to hit the $400 million to $450 million. And on the 87 similarly, I feel good about where we landed and then we were headed to hit the 70% to 80%, which underpins pretty much most of the cash flow for BCA, those two product lines. And then BDS, no change to what we thought, things playing out pretty much as we expected.
Peter Arment — Baird — Analyst
[Indecipherable] color, thanks.
Operator
And next, we’ll go to Doug Harned with Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Doug Harned — Bernstein — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning. When you look at the MAX right now, the good news is you don’t have a demand problem. And as you guide to 31 a month production in 2023, and our assumption is that if you had engine deliveries higher, you can move up from there, given that you’re facilitized and staffed for 38. And if you look at it, the 2025 or 2026 timeframe, when you’re guiding to 50 a month, you were once at 57 a month, so that would not be new territory. So, what I’m trying to get is when you look at these two years, clearly, there are supplier issues in ’23, but is it feasible that you could see that production rate go higher? And if so, what would you want to see? And I would look at ’23 and ’25 differently, since ’25, I’m assuming we’d be out from under a lot of these supplier issues.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Doug, again, I don’t want to conjecture too much, but the two essential things to achieve that kind of objective — number one, are we facilitized at that kind of rate? And the answer is, as we progress through this year, it will be yes. Number two, and by far, the more challenging is, are we going to be stable, month-to-month, quarter-to-quarter, predictable where the supply chain and the buffers that we put in place with respect to that supply chain are adequate. That’s a harder, tougher put. I think it’s going to take us all year to ultimately demonstrate that stability can and will be achieved. And if I get to that, and I hope I do, we do, then I’ll take on that conjecture. But I for right now, we are just squarely focused on that question of stability. As Brian said, our fourth quarter was good. We finished well, we didn’t have a lot of surprises in December. But if you look at the month-to-month in the quarter, you can’t be happy with that. I mean just a few too many stoppages along the way. As you know, our philosophy is we’re not going to travel anything anymore. We’re not going to compound issues that occur, and we’re going to maintain that philosophy. So watch the month-to-month, that’s going to tell you a lot about our willingness to consider the rates you’re talking about.
Doug Harned — Bernstein — Analyst
And is that true? And when you look out to the ’25, ’26 timeframe, obviously there’s a long way to go before we get there. How do you think about just flexibility given there may be a number of scenarios that could come out here in terms of production levels?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, as I said, will we be facilitized to handle that kind of volume at that stage? Yes, we’ll stay well ahead of that, and you’ll see things that occur over this year that will demonstrate that. So, I’m — that’s the part of it. I’m not so worried about. Again, it’s stability questions. And then there will be a factor that we’ll have to apply with respect to China. We’re going to have to believe we’re back and we’re back for good.
Doug Harned — Bernstein — Analyst
Okay, okay, great, thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from Noah Poponak with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Noah Poponak — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Hey, good morning, everyone. I wanted to ask about supply chain. Can you — I heard you, Dave, that you’re not going to mention any specific supplier and I heard that and respect that, but if you could provide any more detail on what’s happening on the 787? Is there a new quality control escape or is it just pure timing delays, visibility into that getting better? Any incremental detail there would be really helpful. And then what’s the latest from the engine OEMs? Sounded a little better yesterday, but what are you guys hearing?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, let me start with the latter, the engine discussion. Again, what I’m really happy with is the transparency with which we are planning for rates with our engine suppliers, and you know who they are and predominantly one, and I’m feeling good about that. And we have plans to do it. I don’t think any of us are yet at the high confidence moment on that, but we will. And that progression will occur over the course of the year when we are at high confidence, then we’re going to get to the kind of rates that we — that are built into our guidance. We’ve got a low end and a higher end, and we’ll find out where we’re going to fit on that depending on it. But the transparency is amazing, no one’s out guessing each other. And because this market has been so strong, no one is second guessing the rates. Everybody knows these rates, if we get to them, we’ll achieve them and then we can continue to move forward.
So, there’s a lot of good, but until we see it month to month and until we get to that high confidence moment, we’re going to hold our production rate steady.
And Brian, you’re up to date on the 87 discussion.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. So, on the 87, so the fourth quarter was our first real full quarter in a while of being able to deliver airplanes, both still at a low rate and also from [Technical Issues] it feels pretty good. And as we go into 2023, remember, the scope of work is pretty clear what we have to do in terms of reworking the inventoried airplanes. But remember, our suppliers have a part of that responsibility in their scope. So, bringing the suppliers, the big suppliers along to make sure that they are conforming and they’ve got all the protocols in place to get that done on their end is something that we’re working our way through. It’s going to take us a little bit longer than originally expected, which is why we are going to shift out, going to five per month a bit later in the year, but we still see 70 to 80 in the cards, and so far so good.
What you’ll likely see is some good liquidation of the inventory as we go through the year and then obviously ramp up the factory as we get deeper into the year. But net-net, the 70 to 80 we still feel good about.
Operator
Next question is from Myles Walton with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Myles Walton — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Thanks, good morning. Just wanted to clarify a couple of things. One, Brian, I think you mentioned $600 million higher abnormal cost from the 787. Is that cash? Is that absorbed now in the ’23 unchanged free cash flow guidance? And then also for defense, if you can just touch on your margin profitability expectation and rough magnitude for 2023? Thanks.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So, in terms of the first question, the 787 abnormal, there is no cash impact. Part of that is just because part of that is just fixed cost absorption, but there’s no change in the cash outlook. It’s not significant in that regard. So, we’re holding.
On the defense margins, so in the quarter, as I mentioned, we had some bumping around from the supply chain constraints and some of the labor not guessing the fourth quarter as well as some of the timing of accruals that I mentioned.
As we move our way into 2023, we clearly expect those margins to get better. It’s not going to be all the way back to what normal might look like, but it’s going to be improved sequentially. And we feel pretty good about the lineup in terms of the product portfolio. And as we remind you is that the products are performing incredibly well with the customers. So, we feel good about the underlying base that BDS margins will get better, and we’re positioned for that as we head into the year.
Myles Walton — Wolfe Research — Analyst
All right, thank you.
Operator
Next, we’ll go to Christine Liwag with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Christine Liwag — Morgan Stanley. — Analyst
Hey, good morning, everyone. Dave, you mentioned the milestone order from the United despite the macroeconomic uncertainty in the near and medium term. So, when you look at COVID-19 now approaching the rearview mirror, China reopening, I mean the demand for air travel has been pretty strong. Can you talk about what your customers are saying about potential new aircraft orders? Should we anticipate more airlines making landmark orders like United? And could we see BCA at a positive book-to-bill for the year?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I — again, I always hesitate to forecast specific orders. I will say that we’re involved in more big orders now than we’ve been in a long time. I think last year was a big indicator for folks that big orders are out there. I think the United One is in fact indicative. But Delta earlier, there’s just — there are some big interest in aviation, I’d say, the majority now outside the U.S. as opposed to inside the U.S. And we’re considering some big — some really big things. And we’re in the midst of all of those. So yeah, I have a — I’m pretty optimistic. I’m not going to forecast numbers because that’s never healthy. But I do think over the next couple of quarters, you’ll see some big decisions made to both manufacturers, and you’ll see some new entrants into the aviation world that aim to make a real difference, and again, largely in the global markets.
Christine Liwag — Morgan Stanley. — Analyst
Thanks David. If I could do a follow-up, with that environment that you described, it sounds pretty robust. Can you describe the pricing environment for these orders and how they compared to pre-COVID levels?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Well, when you’re in the midst of any one deal, it feels ruthless. But if you really do balance it out, and I guess I credit both manufacturers, it’s been pretty disciplined through this whole COVID moment. And so, you see very few reaches and sort of crazy things that are out of the norm. And now, we’re in sort of that supply chain constrained world where people simply want to get positions so that they know they have airplanes when the time comes.
Recessions don’t seem to get in the way because, remember, we’re competing for deliveries out four and five years from now. So, they’re not really computing recession into that. So anyway, again, I feel good, and I also — I’m going to guess that — because it’s always a guess that pricing will stay disciplined.
Christine Liwag — Morgan Stanley. — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
And next, we’ll go to Seth Seifman with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead
Seth Seifman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hey, thanks very much. Good morning. And really, I guess, just a little bit of a quick clarification this morning rather than a question. Just making sure to understand the difference between production and deliveries this year on 737. When you say the high end of the guidance is assuming low 30s and moving to high 40s, you’re talking deliveries there. And then with regard to production, when you say that you are kind of hoping to get to a place where you see some stability this year, that’s with regard to production in the factory. And so that would make it very — make it seem unlikely that the production rate is going higher than 31% this year. Is that a fair way to think about things regardless of where that delivery shake out?
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
You’re right on characterizing the delivery framework. And I would say that as we move through the course of the year and will have fewer inventoried airplanes, that will put a little bit more opportunity on units come out of the factory. So, production rate at the right moment could get higher. We’ll wait and see. We’re just going to stick to the range for now. And as a reminder that we’re not shooting for the low end of the range.
Seth Seifman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Right, right. And as far as that stability that you’re looking for, how much at this point would you say needs to come from improvement in the supply chain versus any improvement that’s necessary in the internal productivity?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Look, I don’t want to suggest that we don’t have our own opportunities internally, we do, mostly driving cycle out and creating buffers in the right positions, etc., all things that you would attach to a company that really practices lean. So, we will make improvements there. But the lion’s share of the rate discussions is going to be built around the supply chain, and the capacity, literally the capacity and capability of that supply chain to meet the new rates. And as I said, very transparent discussions. It’s almost entirely built around labor availability, trained labor ability as we move through the course of the year.
Hiring is not a constraint anymore. People are able to hire the people they need. It’s all about the training and ultimately getting them ready to do the sophisticated work that we demand.
Seth Seifman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
And next, we go to Cai von Rumohr with Cowen. Please go ahead
Cai von Rumohr — Cowen — Analyst
Yes. Thank you very much. Could you update us on your efforts to certify the MAX 7 and 10 as well as the 777X? And as part of that, the agreement to allow you to push out the certification dates of the 7 and the 10, I think you agreed to backfit some software changes on the existing MAX fleet. Could you tell us how much that’s likely to cost? When did you take the accounting impact? Thanks.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
I’ll take the last part of that to get that off the table, Cai, thanks. The provision to retrofit the fleet was taken in the fourth quarter. That’s behind us. It was small. There’s a reason why it’s small. But I just — I hope everybody knows and understands how important it was to get those extensions in place in the legislation. The argument was purely a safety argument. Fortunately, we got a lot of support on both sides of the aisle, and we got it done. So, this gives us all the flexibility we need to get these airplanes certified under the existing applications and we feel good about that.
We think first flights for the 7 will be this year and probably for the 10 next year. So, we like where that stands. Everybody’s calm, the FAA, nobody ever put pencils down. So, we’re just going to progress. And like always, we’re not going to tell you exact dates as to when we expect those certifications.
So, all feels good. And then yes, the legislation that was approved included some improvements that we put into our cockpit on the DASH10 that everybody agrees are useful and helpful to pilots. And those largely software adjustments will be incorporated into the entire MAX fleet over several years. As Brian said, it’s not a large number, but we provided for it, and we’re confident we can meet those objectives provided the CERT and those improvements are accomplished here in the next year or two.
Cai von Rumohr — Cowen — Analyst
And the 777X?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
No, I’m sorry. Everything is on course for the 777X. And I think the only issue that has created some concern over the last couple of years has been our agreement with the ISO on some of the design principles that we think we’re making terrific progress with the ISO. And I think we will have a coordinated regulatory approach to the CERT, and so we’re staying on our targets.
Cai von Rumohr — Cowen — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
And next, we’ll go to David Strauss with Barclays. Please go ahead.
David Strauss — Barclays — Analyst
Thanks for taking my question. Good morning. Could you touch on the large pickup in 787 deferred the balance in the quarter, what that means going forward for the cash outlook on the 87? And also, Brian, if you could just touch on the big pickup that we saw in the BCA unit loss, is that just related to the higher 787 deliveries in the quarter? Thanks.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. On the deferred production balance, that’s basically the 787 cost base extension that I mentioned has an impact on program margins, and that’s amplified by all the finished goods inventory that’s sitting there on the hundred airplanes. So that’s driving the increase. And your last question, basically, it’s impacted by customer mix and the impact of customer concessions and considerations.
David Strauss — Barclays — Analyst
Okay. And a quick follow-up on the — I think you said 138 China airplanes in inventory. Are you still looking to remarket those?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, but only partially. And as of now, when you see the sort of the results of that effort, you can assume that will be on pause with respect to that until we get — until we understand completely where China wants to go. So, the answer is yes, and you’ll see progress but you’ll also see a pause so that we can discern what China wants to do. And hopefully, that’s good news.
David Strauss — Barclays — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from Jason Gursky with Citi. Please go ahead.
Jason Gursky — Citi — Analyst
Hey, good morning, everybody. Brian, just a quick clarification question and then one over on the services business. And a clarification, you mentioned that margins at BDS tick up in ’23, but don’t get back to the long-term margin rates that you expect are on a normalized basis. Just curious what the milestones are going to be for us to be watching out for on getting back to those normalized rates? And then on the services business, maybe just a little bit more color on expectations for ’23 with regard to your expectations on growth rate and margins? Thanks.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, sure. On the BDS, so as you mentioned, long term, high single digits is what we’ve talked about. But in the near term, the same kind of supply chain constraints and labor availability that we’ve talked about in the BCA world, impact the BDS role as well. So, when the current environment is less constrained and stabilizes, that will be a benefit. We expect it to happen partly in 2023, but the key thing to watch is just the stability of the supply chain is going to be a big, big deal that we’re keeping our eye on. And that’s going to be important as margins will tend to accelerate. The time and the pace remains to be seen, but it will get better in 2023.
On the services side, so we had a big year for the services business. It’s going to have — and part of that was based on the commercial recovery, and we enjoyed the benefit of that in 2022. But BGS, in terms of their revenue, they finished the quarter at a pretty good spot, pretty clean basis. And if you just kind of think about that as how you would extrapolate into 2023 by quarter gives you a pretty good view of where we see that growth coming for. So, it will grow, margin will be just fine, right within that mid-teen levels that we’ve enjoyed. So, we feel pretty good about the prospects of the service business, very stable, continue to grow, no surprises.
Jason Gursky — Citi — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Next, we’ll go to Ron Epstein with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Ron Epstein — Bank of America — Analyst
Hey, good morning, everyone. Just circling back on thinking about product development and so on and so forth. Like you mentioned at the Investor Day that Boeing wouldn’t be going forward with a middle of the market product probably until sometime in the 2030s. How should we think about that in light of the recent win with NASA on the — that you trust braced — the trust brace transonic wing program and what that means? Could that be some early technology on a new platform? Or what are you looking for to happen in the technology world to feel confident about doing something new?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So Ron, I’m going to highlight three things that I think are going to contribute to a truly differentiated new product. One of them is the trust wing, so I’ll refer to that now. As you know, that is technology that’s been worked on for the better part of a decade alongside with NASA. And the program that we’ve embarked on here is how do you commercialize it? How do we put it through the right set of tests, etc., so that, in fact, can be incorporated into new airplanes. So, there’s real intent there to be able to do it. I’m not sure it is going to be as good and/or applicable for middle of the market and/or a wide-body, but it will definitely have a role to play someday in the narrow-body world. So that’s number one.
Number two, you’ve heard us talk about the digital thread being able to create the digital model, not just for the airplane, but for the factory and for the servicing. But we are really cutting our teeth on a couple of defense programs that frankly we’re learning a lot every day, all day, so that whatever we do on that next commercial airplane will incorporate the digital threat. And it will be way more mature than what it’s been so far in our discrete defense programs.
So anyway, I feel very good about that. And then the last major element has been the one that usually carried the day, but in this case, I think will simply contribute to a better day and that’s propulsion technologies. Bigger bypass ratios, and you probably know a trust wing setup, trust wing setup will create that opportunity to a far greater extent than today’s wing, simply because of the distance from the ground.
So, there are lots of reasons why I think these technologies can and will be proven and ultimately adapted. And when you’re considering a 50-year kind of program for any new airplane, you have to think about this. And in our view, the objective has to be somewhere between 25% and 30% better than it is today. And that’s what we’re focused on. And I think we have the time to do it and the technologies to play out.
Ron Epstein — Bank of America — Analyst
Got it. And if I can, just a quick detailed follow-on. What are you thinking about headcount productions as we go — or headcount projections as we go into ’23? I mean how has it been in the labor market, kind of across the supply chain, which you hear is everybody needs more people. And how has it been for Boeing? And what are you doing to try to cross that bridge?
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Hey Ron, I want to be clear. We have had no trouble hiring people, none. We’re sort of at or a little above where we were in the days you guys all remember because we’ve got so many of these rework apparatus going on, and there are a lot of people required to do it. So, our job is to actually just take what we have, incorporate all the learning from the folks who are doing the rework, that will displace whatever retirements and/or demographic issues that we have over the next couple of years.
We have a pretty good setup on labor and a pretty good mechanism ironically with these return to service aircraft and the joint verification, a pretty good mechanism to train mechanics, train our people to do the job. And on the engineering front, man, we’ve had a real good run, hiring is over 10,000. Our job is to make sure that we just train them right, get them involved early and get on the life. So, we are not facing a big demand. Our supply chain probably still is working the hiring a bit, but it’s nowhere near as important as the training of the people that they’re bringing in. I’ve seen this thing really ease up in the last year, like really ease up. Tier 1s, I doubt any of them are really fighting for talent anymore. And underneath that, I think the supply chains are filling out. It’s all about now that training and development.
Ron Epstein — Bank of America — Analyst
Got it. thank you.
Operator
And next, we’ll go to Rich Safran with Seaport Research Partners. Please go ahead.
Rich Safran — Seaport Research Partners — Analyst
Dave, Brian and Matt, good morning. So you’re not going to be surprised, I’d like to ask you about defense. I wanted to know first, could you broadly discuss your defense portfolio, the opportunity set and what we should be focusing on? Just by example, I noticed that AIAA you were discussing is C17, C130 recap. Second to that, could you also discuss the F-15EX program in terms of expectations for deliveries, production rates? And also, if margins on the program might be comparable to what we saw when you were selling older models under FMS. Thanks.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So let me take this one. Let me address it at the portfolio level. In light of the difficulties we’ve had with the fixed-price development contracts, which I consider more of a contracting exposure as opposed to a portfolio exposure, I feel really good about the portfolio broadly, and there are reasons why I feel that way. We’re fully invested, as you know, autonomy. I believe autonomy and teaming are going to be one of the real drivers with respect to airplane development, Air Force, Navy requirements going forward. And we’re already invested and we’re making real progress with both of those members of the fighting forces. And I’m sure you know the programs that we talk about.
And there are others we can’t talk about, which we’re as excited if not more excited about. So, the long portfolio and the development that we’ve sustained over all these years, I feel really good about. We have the T7 trainer. It’s way more important than just the market for trainers itself. Ultimately, we think it’s — it can be used as a derivative to do other things for the Air Force, and I’m sure you know what that’s about. But maybe even more importantly, it’s an absolute poster child for our digital thread. And it’s teaching our customers how to think about the use of the digital thread, and it’s teaching us how to perfect all the production technologies that we need to take full advantage of the digital trend.
So, if I look at our — just our sort of our wing fleets, I feel very good about where we are. And as you point out, the F-15 — the new derivatives, boy, they are really important to our customers. We feel great about the future. It feels like a new platform frankly from my perspective, I’m not going to hand out the production rates at this stage, but we’re feeling pretty good about the international demand as well as our U.S. demand.
And you know — in light of the only other choices, this gets frankly more valuable over time until the really new classified work ultimately is completed and brought to the market. Anyway, I feel quite good about the portfolio. It’s development where we stand in it.
And I’m sorry, some of the contracting methods that we used in the early going here, but anyway, we are where we are. And I can’t get off the page without talking about the tanker, which we all still believe very, very strongly and again, difficult contracting moment for us. On the other hand, futility to the Air Force has been fantastic. The Vision system, our commitment to it and then technologies beyond that allow for even autonomous refueling. These are things we’re fully invested in, and we believe in the growth of the industry and the need with our customer. So anyway, there are other things, and you probably know a lot of that, but there’s a reason to feel good, frankly, on the development front with respect to Boeing’s defense business.
Rich Safran — Seaport Research Partners — Analyst
Thanks for that, Dave.
Brian West — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
John, we have time for one more question.
Operator
Certainly, and that will be from Sheila Kahyaoglu with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Sheila Kahyaoglu — Jefferies — Analyst
Good morning, guys and thank you. I know it’s been asked a thousand different ways, but I don’t know if I know the answer yet. So maybe, Dave, can you give us an idea of how — where you are on the MAX and 787 from a cash per aircraft perspective? Or how far that is below prior peak? And is there a cadence of that profitability, free cash flow as we think about production rates increasing, supply chain impacts and just pricing as you get aircraft out of inventory.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Let me take a shot at the — I’ll talk cash margins, and let’s start with the 787. So near term, they’re pressured but positive, and we got to work through all the things that we’ve been describing. In long term, they’re going to be higher than they were back in 2018, driven by productivity, pricing in the Dash 10 model. So, the 87 feels like it’s on the verge of doing some real special stuff over the long term. On the 37, near-term pressure because all the supply chain things we talked about, some customer mix things that we’re going to battle through impossibly, some impact at remarketing. And then long term, it’s going to be more or less in line with what it was before, and the benefit being the productivity and the rate ramp. So that’s kind of how we think about those two programs over time from a cash perspective.
Sheila, you really have to get through calendar year ’24. And then a lot of the cloud, a lot of the things that we’ve been wrestling with, the things that impact the — our margins and the lumpiness along the way, that all begins to clear as we get to the tail end of ’24. And as we think about ’25 and on, I think that clarity will be apparent to everybody.
Sheila Kahyaoglu — Jefferies — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
All right, and that concludes our fourth quarter 2022 earnings call. Thank you for joining.
Dave Calhoun — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, everyone.