KEY POINTS
  • American Airlines is negotiating compensation from Boeing over the 737 Max grounding.
  • Regulators banned airlines from flying the planes in March after two fatal crashes.
  • Southwest reached an agreement with Boeing last month and also said it would share that amount with employees.
American Airlines' Boeing 737 Max planes sit parked outside of a maintenance hangar at Tulsa International Airport (TUL) in Tulsa, Oklahoma, May 14, 2019.

American Airlines is planning to share with employees a portion of the compensation it expects to receive from Boeing for the nearly 10-month grounding of the 737 Max, a disruption that carriers have said cost them more than $1 billion in revenue.

American's talks with Boeing are still ongoing, a spokesman said. Several other 737 Max customers, including Icelandair, Turkish Airlines and Southwest Airlines, have recently reached agreements with the manufacturer, but the final amounts, whether in cash compensation or discounts on aircraft, isn't yet clear because the grounding is ongoing.