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NewsApril 25, 2013

Boeing reported a better-than-expected first-quarter profit, even as it scrambled to fix its grounded 787. The company on Wednesday said deliveries of the 787 should resume in early May. Most of the 50 planes already delivered to airlines will be fixed by the middle of the month, Chairman and CEO Jim McNerney said on the company's quarterly earnings conference call...

By JOSHUA FREED ~ Associated Press

Boeing reported a better-than-expected first-quarter profit, even as it scrambled to fix its grounded 787.

The company on Wednesday said deliveries of the 787 should resume in early May. Most of the 50 planes already delivered to airlines will be fixed by the middle of the month, Chairman and CEO Jim McNerney said on the company's quarterly earnings conference call.

Resuming deliveries and passenger flights would cap a notable turnaround for Boeing. The three-month grounding because of battery problems frustrated airlines and turned a spotlight onto the way commercial planes are designed and regulated. Putting the problem behind it will let Boeing focus on building versions of its best-selling 737 and 777.

Air safety authorities around the world grounded 787s after two planes had smoldering batteries -- one of them including a fire, one of them in-flight -- in January. The Federal Aviation Administration has approved Boeing's redesigned battery system, which the company said should sharply reduce the risk of fire.

Once the FAA approves the fix on individual planes, airlines can begin flying them again. United Airlines, the only U.S. airline with the planes, moved one of its six 787s to a Boeing facility in San Antonio, Texas, on Tuesday to get the battery fixed. Neither of the battery incidents involved a United jet.

The new battery system includes extra insulation between the battery's individual cells, a box designed to contain any fire and changes that Boeing said will almost instantly extinguish any fire. The fix should keep any battery problems "from affecting the airplane or even being noticed by passengers," McNerney said.

The new battery setup has been installed on 10 787s that belong to airlines, and on nine more that have been built but not delivered, he said. Each installation takes about five days.

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Boeing wouldn't say how much the 787 issue has cost. Much of the expense was soaked up by its research and development budget, Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith said.

Boeing's net income rose 20 percent in the quarter to $1.11 billion, or $1.44 per share. Excluding pension-related charges, Boeing would have earned $1.73 per share, well above analyst expectations.

The 787 troubles showed up in other places besides Boeing's bottom line. Revenue fell 3 percent to $18.89 billion in part because Boeing delivered just one 787 before the grounding. Airlines make their final payment for the plane when it's delivered.

Boeing generated almost no cash in the quarter. Free cash flow, a measure of cash generated by a business, dropped to $3 million, from $413 million a year ago.

Boeing loses money on each 787 it builds. Smith said it should be breaking even on each plane in about two years.

Boeing still expects to meet its financial and delivery targets this year. That includes delivering at least 60 787s. It delivered 137 planes during the quarter, because faster production of 737s and 777s offset the lack of 787 deliveries.

Operating profit rose 12 percent in its defense unit as its space business grew sharply.

Shares of Chicago-based Boeing Co. rose $2.65, or 3 percent, to $90.83 in trading Wednesday after rising as high $92.65 earlier. That was the highest level for the shares since December 2007, according to FactSet.

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