Boeing Bond Analysis Presented to Dr. ----- Prepared by Filipe Ferro October 9‚ 2012 Table of Contents Boeing Company 3 Bond Issue 3 Unsystematic Risk 4 Principal Repayment 4 Debt to Invested Capital 4 Debt to Equity 4 Current & Quick Ratios 5 Interest Repayment 5 Times Interest Earned 5 Credit Position 6 Competitor Analysis 6 General Dynamics 6 Northrop Grumman 7 Systematic Risk 7 Market Responsiveness 7 Duration 8 Modified Duration 9 Accuracy of Rating 9
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CORPORATE ANALYSIS The Aerospace & Defense Industry The Boeing Company Table of Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4 1. PRESENTATION OF THE BOEING COMPANY 5 1.1 Industry Analysis 6 1.2 Business of The Boeing Company 7 1.3 Origin and History’s Timelines of The Boeing Company 8 1.4 Management and Organizational Structure of The Boeing Company 11 1.5 The Corporate Strategy of The Boeing Company 14 2. THE SWOT ANALYSIS OF THE BOEING COMPANY 17 2.1. Strengths 17 2.2. Weaknesses 17 2.3. Opportunities
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Case Study A – The Boeing Company Q1 about analyzing the tasks of the activity in terms of value‚ time‚ frequency and cost. - What criteria were used to classify tasks as value-added (PE and PI) or nonvalue-added (SE and SI)? - Is an activity value-added if it changed the form‚ fit‚ or function of the product‚ for which the customer is willing to pay? - Why is operation 070.00 classified as SE? - What is the task time versus flow time for the operation 060.00 under 737 EBU? - Why were the
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MISSION STATEMENT Boeings focus is on the practice of eight core company values Leadership‚ Integrity‚ Quality‚ Customer satisfaction‚ Employee corp.‚ Diverse and involve team‚ Good Corporate citizenship and Enhance shareholder value STRATEGIC PLAN Boeing continuously scrutinizes its segments and divisions to ensure alignment with the company vision TEN STRATEGY OM DECISIONS GOODS AND SERVICE DESIGN: Boeing is the world’s largest aerospace company and leading manufacturer of commercial jetliners
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Case Study 39 Airbus vs. Boeing Prepared by Lisa Neumann Matthias Pernkopf Viktoria Scheidl Case study 39 Airbus vs. Boeing Contents: • • • • • History of Airbus History of Boeing Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 History of Airbus •1970: Airbus was formed as European consortium of French and German companies •Spain companies joined the consortium •1979: British Aerospace joined Airbus Industrie. •Each of the four partners operated as national companies •Airbus developed a deserved
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Corporation The following is a list of descriptive information for Boeing: Name of the Corporation: Boeing Current 2013 Fortune 500 ranking: #30 [1] Corporate headquarter location and address: Boeing Corporate Officies 100 North Riverside Chicago‚ Illinois 60606 [2] CEO’s and other key company and marketing leader’s names and position titles: W. James (Jim) McNerney‚ Jr. Chairman‚ President and Chief Executive Officer‚ The Boeing Company Raymond L. Conner President and Chief Executive Officer
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Control Mechanisms at Boeing MGT 330 March 13‚ 2011 Control Mechanisms at Boeing Controlling is an extremely important function of management. Manager’s use control to ensure that goals are met and to make the necessary changes if they are not. Several control mechanisms exist. Managers within companies use the mechanisms to achieve results. This paper will identify‚ compare‚ and contrast four of these control mechanisms as they relate to Boeing. It will determine the effectiveness of these
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This article discusses the importance of Boeing to seek parts and components for their planes‚ including military planes‚ in countries outside of the U.S.; in other words‚ globalizing their company. However‚ to every story there are two sides‚ in this case – the pros and cons of globalization. One of the biggest advantages of globalization today is that when companies go multinational‚ they retain or gain competitiveness within their field. Throughout the world‚ there are many great ideas when
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compete deters new entrants. 2. Substitutes: Low. There are several substitutes available like cruise‚ buses‚ cars‚ trains or not traveling at all. However‚ these options can’t compete with flying because the price-performance trade-off in this case is not attractive. 3. Bargaining Power of Suppliers: Low – Moderate. The supplier group in this industry is fragmented‚ so it is relatively easy for the aircraft manufacturers to switch suppliers. However‚ some parts require a high degree of
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Boeing has always been a innovator in aerospace technology. The company must keep striving to enhance every product they create. Boeing has typically been a leader in new models of airplanes and the technology that goes along with them. So many new innovations are constantly evolving; therefore the competition Boeing sustains is quite high. Since their biggest competitor is Aerobus‚ there is constantly a race to have the best product‚ with the best technology for the best price of course. Boeing
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