Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Boeing in talks to sell up to 500 planes to China: Bloomberg
ADVERTISEMENT


New York, Aug 21 (AFP) Aug 21, 2025

US aviation giant Boeing is in talks to sell up to 500 aircraft to Chinese companies, Bloomberg News reported Thursday, citing sources familiar with the matter.


The deal would be a major win for the struggling US manufacturer, with company shares rising as high as 3.7 percent in pre-market trades, but up only around 0.2 percent at 11:20 am (1520 GMT).


Bloomberg's sources said the deal would be contingent on Washington and Beijing coming to a longer-term agreement in their simmering trade war.


The Boeing deal would likely be a key facet of a US-China trade deal, according to Bloomberg, whose sources said Chinese officials had begun surveying domestic airlines for how many planes they would need.


"We don't comment on speculation," Boeing told AFP, when asked about the report.


Since taking office in January, President Donald Trump has hit trading partners around the world with new tariffs, seeking to address US trade deficits that he says are evidence of unfair practices.


Purchases of planes from Boeing, the largest US manufacturing exporter, often play a role in Trump's deals promising to offset trade imbalances.


In July, the White House said that Japan had committed to buying 100 Boeing jets, and Indonesia 50 aircraft, as part of trade pacts negotiated to avoid steeper tariffs.


Trump has taken particular aim at China in his attempt to remake international trade.


Washington and Beijing have slapped tariffs on each other's products this year, with the escalation at one point rising to prohibitive triple-digit levels and snarling trade, including a temporary halt to deliveries of Boeing jets.


Both sides, however, agreed in May to temporarily lower the duties, and have issued subsequent 90-day extensions as they negotiate a longer-term deal.


China's last major Boeing deal came early in Trump's first term in office, during his state visit in November 2017, when Beijing agreed to purchase 300 single and twin-aisle planes for more than $37 billion.


Boeing in July reported a smaller second-quarter loss than the previous year, while delivering its most planes since 2018.


The manufacturer has been dogged by quality control-related issues after the near-catastrophic blowout of a fuselage panel on a 737 MAX in January 2024.


That incident followed two deadly crashes of the popular MAX aircraft in 2018 and 2019.


des/aha


BOEING


ADVERTISEMENT





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
SpaceX launched secretive X-37B US military space drone
What came before the Big Bang remains a mystery but new tools may help
PREFIRE CubeSats to operate through 2026 as mission expands worldwide

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Sweden picks mini-reactors for first nuclear expansion in 50 years
Boeing in talks to sell up to 500 planes to China: Bloomberg
Meta makes huge cloud computing deal with Google

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
SpaceX launches secretive US military spacecraft
North Korea's Kim decorates troops who fought for Russia against Ukraine
China says summit to provide stability, counter 'hegemonism'

24/7 News Coverage
7.5 magnitude earthquake in the Chilean Antarctic
Hurricane Erin brings coastal flooding to N. Carolina, Virginia
Landslide kills 15 in Guinea; Bridge site in China collapses 7 dead, 9 missing



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.