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Boeing, trying to emerge from one of company’s most difficult eras, is having a pretty good week

Arlington-based aerospace giant wins $96B jet order from Qatar

FILE - A Boeing 747 with the color scheme of planes used by the Qatari royal family is seen Friday, May 2, 2025 at San Antonio International Airport in San Antonio, Texas. President Donald Trump said this week that he wants to accept the $400 million plane, and that it would later be donated to a presidential library. (Brandon Lingle/The San Antonio Express-News via AP, File)

FILE - A Boeing 747 with the color scheme of planes used by the Qatari royal family is seen Friday, May 2, 2025 at San Antonio International Airport in San Antonio, Texas. President Donald Trump said this week that he wants to accept the $400 million plane, and that it would later be donated to a presidential library. (Brandon Lingle/The San Antonio Express-News via AP, File)

Boeing, trying to emerge from one of company’s most difficult eras, is having a pretty good week

Arlington-based aerospace giant wins $96B jet order from Qatar

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SUMMARY:

  • -based announces $96B jet order from , its largest ever
  • 20 737-8 jets also ordered by Saudi company, with 10 options
  • Orders coincide with President Trump’s Middle East trip
  • Trump also under scrutiny for accepting Qatari Boeing 747 gift
  • Boeing shares surge despite past safety, labor and legal issues

WASHINGTON (AP) — Boeing has secured a pair of major orders in the Middle East during a visit to the region by President .

The aerospace manufacturer based in Arlington County confirmed a $96 billion order from Qatar, one day after announcing an order from a company in for 20 737-8 jets and options for 10 additional aircraft.

The Qatar deal, which includes Boeing’s 787 and jets, is the biggest order for 787s and wide body jets in Boeing’s history, the company confirmed.

“That’s pretty good,” Trump said in announcing the order. “Get those planes out there.”

It has been a particularly good week for Boeing. According to several media reports, China lifted a ban on its airlines taking deliveries of Boeing planes earlier this week as part of Monday’s trade truce with the U.S.

Boeing had already been in the news for its planes in the Middle East, but for different reasons.

Donald Trump said he would accept a luxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet as a gift from the ruling family of Qatar, setting off intense criticism from Democrats, ethicists and even some unease among Republicans.

There are concerns from security and ethics experts that the plane could be less secure, costly to retrofit and a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition on foreign gifts. Trump offered no national security imperative for a swift upgrade rather than waiting for Boeing to finish new jets that have been in the works for years.

Boeing has lost more than $35 billion since 2019 following the crashes of two then-new Max jets that killed 346 people.

In January 2024, a panel blew off a 737 Max shortly after takeoff from Portland, Oregon, and last year, a strike by union machinists halted production at Boeing plants and hampered the company’s delivery capability.

Shares of Boeing, which has been mired in legal and regulatory problems since the crashes six years ago, bounced to their highest level in more than a year Wednesday. It was the fifth straight day of gains for the  company.

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