Boeing's quarterly sales jump 57% as CEO says there's 'a lot to be optimistic about'

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A Boeing Co. 737 Max airplane at the company's manufacturing facility in Renton, Washington, US, on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025.

David Ryder | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Boeing reported revenue ahead of Wall Street expectations for the fourth quarter as the company's turnaround picked up steam following years of crises.

The company's airplane deliveries last year were the highest since 2018, helping drive revenue. Boeing brought in $23.9 billion in the last three months of 2025, a 57% increase over the same period in 2024 and topping analysts' expectations. Cash flow of $400 million was roughly double what Wall Street was expecting.

CEO Kelly Ortberg told staff that the company is making progress and that there's "a lot to be optimistic about" in 2026.

"At the same time, with progress comes expectations, and our customers and stakeholders are going to expect more from us this year," he said.

Here's how Wall Street expects Boeing performed in the fourth quarter, according to analysts' estimates compiled by LSEG:

Earnings per share: $9.92 adjusted Revenue: $23.95 billion vs. $22.6 billion expected

The company's reported earnings per share of $9.92 included the impact of the sale of its Jeppesen aircraft navigation unit.

Boeing still has a long road ahead to deliver delayed aircraft — some of which haven't yet won regulator approval — to customers around the world. 

Boeing delivered 600 airplanes to customers last year, nearly double the number from 2024 and the most since 2018. Ortberg, who came out of retirement to run the manufacturer in 2024, and other executives have said more production increases are on the horizon in the coming months.

Deliveries are key for aircraft manufacturers because customers pay the bulk of an aircraft's price when they receive it.

For Boeing, it's a crucial ramp up after the company has burned through roughly $40 billion since the first quarter of 2019 — when the second of two fatal crashes of the best-selling 737 Max plunged it into crisis for years — through the third quarter of 2025. The Covid-19 pandemic, residual supply chain and labor shortages and a host of production problems have continued to hamstring the company, the largest U.S. exporter by value.

Boeing handed over 63 jetliners to customers last month, and 44 of those deliveries were 737 Maxes, the manufacturer said earlier this month.

Airbus still delivered more aircraft last year than Boeing, with 793, though that total is below the record 863 airplanes the European manufacturer handed over in 2019.

But Boeing outsold Airbus with 1,173 net orders in 2025 over its European competitor's 889 net orders for the year. Airlines are starting to look out to the 2030s, securing delivery slots as they chart growth and replace older, more fuel-thirsty planes. Boeing counts Alaska Airlines and Delta Air Lines as customers in recent weeks for deliveries into the next decade.

Boeing is far from out of the woods, though. Investors will be eager to hear from the company's leadership about what delivery pace is most realistic this year. The manufacturer still needs the Federal Aviation Administration's approval for further Max increases beyond 42 per month, a requirement the regulator instated after a near-catastrophic midair blowout of a panel in January 2024.

Investors are likely to seek a firmer timeline for long-delayed 737 Max 7 and Max 10 certification as well as the twin-engine 777X, which will become the largest wide-body in its lineup. They are also looking for an update on Boeing's defense business, where delays have included the two 747s that will serve as the next Air Force One aircraft.

Boeing executives will host an earnings conference call at 10:30 a.m. ET.

This is developing news. Please check back for additional updates.

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