Sometimes the best business strategy is just showing up when your competitor can't. That's the position Boeing Co (BA) finds itself in right now, and after the few years they've had, they'll take it.
While Boeing spent the better part of recent memory as the aviation industry's cautionary tale, Airbus SE (OTCPK:EADSY) is suddenly dealing with its own mess. And the timing couldn't be better for Boeing.
When It Rains, It Pours for Airbus
Airbus had a weekend to forget. A major safety recall hit more than half of the global A320 fleet due to flight-control software problems that required urgent inspections and fixes. Before the industry could even process that, Airbus announced another issue: quality defects on fuselage panels from a key supplier. The stock didn't take it well.
These aren't minor hiccups. We're talking about the kind of headlines that make airline executives nervous and board members start asking uncomfortable questions.
Boeing's Quiet Comeback
Meanwhile, Boeing has been doing something remarkable: acting normal. The company delivered more than 50 jets in October, which might not sound revolutionary until you remember this is the same company that spent years dealing with production freezes and regulatory nightmares.
Consistency matters in aviation, and right now Boeing is providing it. With Airbus facing potential delivery delays, airlines looking for planes suddenly have fewer options. Boeing becomes the reliable choice by default, which is a plot twist nobody saw coming.
The Delivery Race Gets Complicated
Airbus set an ambitious target of delivering more than 800 jets by year-end. That was always going to be tight, but now with safety recalls and manufacturing defects throwing wrenches into the schedule, it's looking increasingly difficult.
Airlines plan their fleet strategies years in advance, and delivery delays cascade through everything from route planning to financial projections. If Airbus can't deliver on time, Boeing's steady production suddenly looks a lot more attractive.
The irony here is hard to miss. Boeing didn't win this moment by being brilliant. They won it by being present while their competitor dealt with crises that look uncomfortably similar to Boeing's own recent history. If Boeing can maintain this momentum, 2025 might mark a real shift in the aircraft duopoly, not because Boeing soared, but because Airbus hit unexpected turbulence.