Boeing Headlines Industrial Prospects and Pitfalls in 2025

The new year will start with plenty of intrigue, especially in manufacturing, aerospace and logistics, the area where I hunt for interesting storylines about how companies navigate opportunities and pitfalls.

President-elect Donald Trump’s actions will be a prime focus when he takes office on Jan. 20, especially his loose strategy on tariffs. Manufacturers are uneasy about how they will impact the components they import or goods they exports.

The tension will get started even earlier as East Coast dockworkers threaten to strike on Jan. 15 if their labor contract doesn’t include anti-automation language. This would not be a great start for a freight market that is trying to pull itself out of a two-year slump.

The biggest story for the manufacturing sector, though, will be Boeing Co.’s attempt to turn around its flagging manufacturing culture. The goal is straightforward: Boeing must ramp up aircraft production while putting quality and safety first. The irony is that the more success that new Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg has at this task, the more mundane the story will become. Dull is good after Boeing’s terrible 2024, which kicked off with a door plug blowing out during a flight on a 737 Max and closed with a 53-day machinist strike that widened the company’s losses.

In aerospace, Elon Musk will provide must-see theater as both the CEO of SpaceX, which has revolutionized launches with reusable rockets, and as a whisperer in the president’s ear on how to manage the Federal Aviation Administration, which regulates the industry. The makers of electric-powered rotorcraft, including Archer Aviation Inc. and Joby Aviation Inc., would be thrilled if Musk could light a fire under the FAA to certify their new flying machines.