“This is an engineering company, it needs an engineering culture and engineering management,” aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia said last week. >> Boeing's latest move to focus on safety https://t.co/vaZyCkVJr8 via @crainschicago
“They’ve got a good roadmap, but there are no guarantees when it comes to redesigns like this,” said Richard Aboulafia, an analyst with the Teal Group >> Boeing 737 Max update on return to service https://t.co/e9ETy8nCb6
Defense companies tend to have more success in the civil market, Teal Group’s Philip Finnegan said, because those buyers are very similar to military purchasers. https://t.co/dWwbqSdypE
"The road to where we are today is paved with goofy patents that went nowhere," says Richard Aboulafia, an aviation analyst at Teal Group, in "No, you won’t have a standing seat on an airplane anytime soon" https://t.co/eg5PvemwkJ via @phillyinquirer
"The two companies have little overlap and may not face strong regulatory push-back to their deal, said Richard Aboulafia, aerospace analyst..." https://t.co/DqvgSeee2M
PAS19 - Take Flight in WA
Hear how you can join WA state's thriving aerospace cluster from industry experts: @waltgov Cyrus Habib, Roei Ganzarski - @MagniX, Richard Aboulafia - @TealGroup
June 19 - 2pm
USA Partnership Pavilion LaunchPad Hall 3
RSVP [email protected]
When it comes to building aircraft in the US, Washington is the state of US aerospace. No other comes close, as confirmed by the Teal Group’s 2018 Aerospace Competitive Economics Study. https://t.co/rlz4SAamdV
Regulators "are going to want a lot of explanation," said Richard Aboulafia of the Teal Group. "We're going to learn a lot." >> Will FAA's plan for 737 MAX fly outside US? https://t.co/11nRNwYDLK via @FRANCE24
“It’s like the fog of war,” Teal Group aerospace industry consultant Richard Aboulafia tells Barron’s in "What Boeing Stock Shows About Managing Risk in a Social Media World" https://t.co/wULEIBn9fL via @BarronsOnline
"There's no reason this can't be solved," said Richard Aboulafia of Teal Group, on Boeing and the 737 MAX. "This looks like software and training and not any kind of fundamental aircraft flaw. It's just a question of keeping people confident." https://t.co/liH3y9kWjA
"A lot of people were taken by surprise," says aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia of news that Boeing's decision to launch the so-called New Mid-market Airplane (NMA) will not come until 2020. https://t.co/woRiPpJSQC
Richard Aboulafia, a vice president at Teal Group, a U.S. aviation intelligence company, said Boeing is doing a good balancing act in China --- Boeing’s new production facility in China doesn’t quite build planes https://t.co/AeFfG69mrM via @WSJ
Steve Zaloga, a missile expert with the Teal Group, an aerospace consulting firm in Fairfax, Virginia, said the equivalent U.S. systems are advanced versions of the Patriot air defense system built by Lockheed and Raytheon Co. https://t.co/aeEW5ADiDQ via @bpolitics
“I think [Airbus and Boeing] can get to rate 57 and 60,” said Richard Aboulafia, a vice president and aerospace analyst with the Teal Group in Washington, D.C. “Beyond that, that’s where you will have questions.” https://t.co/IXm15E2Qk6
“There are military applications for swarms, but in terms of commercial, it’s nascent.” -- Phil Finnegan, Teal Group, in Drone swarms are the new fireworks https://t.co/3gGzGxXcvI via @FortuneMagazine
“The question is how elastic is the public’s memory,” notes Marco Cáceres, a 30-year veteran spaceflight analyst with the Teal Group, who has tracked closely the progress of space travel startups as well as the veterans. https://t.co/DxSws3yDhe
"So many of the services that are being done by the big, geostationary satellites may well be done by some of these new, big constellations," said Marco Caceres, senior space analyst at market analysis firm Teal Group. https://t.co/ex179wwc4j