Wildchild in on Boeing

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by wildchild, Aug 10, 2024.

  1. VicBee

    VicBee

    I don't want to spin this into a political discussion, just want to point to elements leading to why Boeing is where its at.
    All corporations dominated by union work forces are not dynamic by definition. Any changes to a process, however small, requires negotiations that almost always lead to an additional cost to the company. As a consequence, management is usually slow pushing for changes that may lead to conflict with the union and prefers to not rock the boat.
    This would be a death sentence to companies operating in a competitive market, but Boeing is a near monopoly with substantial government support (military, space). It's a national interest/too big to fail behemoth with even less incentives to change. If it wasn't for Airbus, they'd probably still be making 747s.
     
    #11     Aug 11, 2024
  2. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    I'm all for slave labor too if the quarterly report comes in strong. :rolleyes:

    F-em.... their kids don't need healthcare.
     
    #12     Aug 11, 2024
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  3. TheDawn

    TheDawn

    #13     Aug 11, 2024
  4. TheDawn

    TheDawn

    Very surprised none of them went to jail, with TWO back-to-back crashes involving hundreds of precious lives lost because of their obvious cost-cutting measures and covering up the problems to the regulators. There were DoJ investigations that just went nowhere.
     
    #14     Aug 11, 2024
  5. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    Hey those 737 Max crashes.... maybe we should blame it on the BSWU.... the "Boeing Software Writers Union." Oops.... it doesn't exist. Well it kinda does, but the C-Suite farmed out most of the code writing to India at $9/hr. Which union are they in?

    And that runaway nosedown trim... it wasn't those belegured Indian code-writers' fault anyway. It was "Joe-Six-Pack the Rivet Pusher's" making $35/hour, coming to work everyday so his family can have a better life and his kids can go to college and not endure a factory job... it was his fault. Or at least his contract's.

    But by god... Boeing met their numbers that quarter and that's all that ever matters. :thumbsup:
     
    #15     Aug 11, 2024
    TrailerParkTed and TheDawn like this.
  6. TheDawn

    TheDawn

    Couldn't have said it better. Boeing's problems is not Union. It's somebody up there who valued $$ over lives and think they will never get caught because they trust those engineers can always come up with something that can defy physics.
     
    #16     Aug 11, 2024
  7. VicBee

    VicBee

    Lol... You should write a Victor Hugo made in USA novel on the hardships of the $35/hr blue collar worker's life. Reality is he's not sending his kid to college but instead getting him on the gravy at Boeing.
     
    #17     Aug 11, 2024
  8. GordyG

    GordyG

    The 2 big down days on the 1st and 2nd of Aug, followed by something sort of resembling a bearish rising wedge pattern, to me suggest leaning towards there could be more downside coming.
     
    #18     Aug 11, 2024
  9. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Yeah except reality gets in the way of your spin.

    Boeing has been unionized for decades. The C Suite to boost their salaries and options tried going around long term, knowledgeable, properly incentified union workers and got burnnnnnnnned.

    Here's a tissue, too bad you don't make $35/hr - oh arbiter of what others should or should not make.
     
    #19     Aug 11, 2024
    vanzandt likes this.
  10. VicBee

    VicBee

    My point still holds that anything union freezes any dynamic opportunities to change anything. You brought up money, not me.
     
    #20     Aug 11, 2024