Boeing on Monday launched a stock offering that could raise roughly $19 billion as the planemaker looks to strengthen its finances squeezed by a month-long worker strike and a year-long safety crisis.
Boeing is offering 90 million in common stock and $5 billion in depositary shares. The company's shares fell 1% in premarket trading.
The planemaker was already reeling under a regulator-imposed cap on production of its MAX jets after a January mid-air panel blowout.
The combination of labor woes and its production problems have caused it to burn cash the last three quarters. Last week, the company reported a $6 billion third-quarter loss and said it would burn cash next year. The same day, striking workers rebuffed an improved contract.
A capital raise is essentially for Boeing to preserve its investment-grade credit rating. Rating agencies have warned that a prolonged strike may lead to a downgrade in Boeing's credit rating, likely pushing up the cost of capital.
The strike is costing the company more than $1 billion per month, according to one estimate that was released before Boeing announced it would cut 10% of its workforce.
Earlier this month, Boeing entered into a $10 billion credit agreement with banks and announced plans to raise up to $25 billion through stock and debt offerings.
S&P Global has warned of a ratings downgrade if Boeing slipped below target cash balance of $10 billion or if the company had to increase leverage to meet debt maturities.
Boeing, which has never fallen below the investment-grade rating, had cash and marketable securities of $10.50 billion as of Sept. 30.
It has $11.5 billion of debt maturing through Feb. 1, 2026, and is committed to issuing $4.7 billion of its shares to acquire Spirit AeroSystems and assume its debt.
Reuters had reported earlier this month Boeing was examining options to raise billions of dollars through a sale of stock and equity-like securities.
Boeing delivered 33 jets in September, down from 40 in August.