Boeing secures 200 aircraft order from China, with potential to expand to 750 planes

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Boeing just landed its biggest Chinese deal in years. China confirmed a purchase of roughly 200 commercial aircraft, with the potential to scale up to 750 planes if performance benchmarks are met.

The initial order, which includes engines from GE Aerospace along with spare parts and related equipment, represents a meaningful reopening of a market that had been effectively frozen for Boeing since 2017.

How the deal came together

President Donald Trump first announced the accord on May 15 during a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. Boeing confirmed its commitment to the initial 200-aircraft order shortly after.

China’s Commerce Ministry then formally solidified the purchase on May 20, putting an official government stamp on what had been a diplomatic announcement. The fleet is expected to consist predominantly of 737 and 777 models, two of Boeing’s most commercially significant product lines.

The initial 200 planes are locked in, and the remaining 550 function more like an option than a guarantee, contingent on Boeing meeting unspecified performance standards.

The inclusion of GE Aerospace engines integrates another major American industrial player into the supply chain. Engine deals come with decades of maintenance contracts, spare parts revenue, and aftermarket servicing.

Nearly a decade of frozen skies

Boeing’s presence in China had been declining since roughly 2017, caught in the crossfire of escalating trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.

There was also the matter of China’s own ambitions. The country has been developing the COMAC C919, a domestically produced narrow-body jet designed to compete directly with the Boeing 737 and Airbus A320. Early deliveries of the C919 began in recent years, signaling that Beijing was at least partially serious about reducing dependence on Western manufacturers.

What this means for investors

Boeing’s commercial airplane division generates the bulk of its revenue, and an order of this size provides visibility into production schedules and cash flows. For suppliers, subcontractors, and the broader aerospace manufacturing ecosystem, confirmed orders translate directly into hiring plans, capital expenditure decisions, and margin forecasts.

GE Aerospace stands to benefit in parallel. Engine orders tied to 200 aircraft already represent meaningful revenue, and the aftermarket servicing contracts that follow could generate income for decades.

Airbus has spent years building market share in China while Boeing was sidelined. And COMAC’s C919 adds a wildcard that didn’t exist a decade ago, meaning Boeing isn’t just competing with Airbus for Chinese orders anymore; it’s competing with China’s own national champion.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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