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2021.03.23 11:38 GMT+8

Boeing enters into $5.28 billion revolving credit agreement

Updated 2021.03.23 11:38 GMT+8
CGTN

Boeing said on Monday it had entered into a $5.28 billion, two-year revolving credit agreement, as the U.S. plane maker contends with a prolonged slowdown in commercial air travel fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Earlier this month, Reuters reported that the company had approached a group of banks for a new $4 billion revolving credit facility and had the option to raise the size to as much as $6 billion. 

The first Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner prototype takes off. /VCG

"We have no current plans to draw on our credit revolvers, as we continue to be confident that we have sufficient liquidity and are not planning to increase our debt levels," said Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith. 

Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase Bank, BofA Securities and Wells Fargo Securities are the joint lead arrangers and joint book managers, the plane maker said on Monday.

The credit agreement is scheduled to end on March 19, 2023, Boeing said in a filing.

Investment-grade rated companies use revolving credit facilities as backstop financing, with these facilities remaining undrawn for the most part.

In January, Boeing posted a record annual loss as the global health crisis compounded problems for the world's largest aerospace company that was reeling from the grounding of its best-selling 737 MAX jets after two fatal crashes.

Source(s): Reuters
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